Her Daughter Said The Bed Felt Smaller—Then The Camera Showed Dad-xurixuri

“Mom… my bed gets smaller at night,” Emma said from the kitchen doorway, “like somebody lies down beside me.”

Sarah Miller had one hand on a spatula and the other resting on the counter, waiting for pancakes to bubble on the griddle.

The kitchen smelled like butter and warm syrup, and outside their small suburban house, a school bus sighed at the corner with its red lights blinking against the gray morning.

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It should have been an ordinary Tuesday.

It was not.

Emma stood barefoot on the tile in her bunny pajamas, her blondish-brown hair tangled over one eye, her cheeks pale, her lids swollen as if she had been awake most of the night.

Sarah turned down the burner and tried to smile because mothers do that first, even when fear moves through them before a thought does.

“What do you mean, your bed gets smaller, sweetheart?”

Emma rubbed the heel of her hand against one eye.

“Like there’s no room,” she said.

Sarah looked past her toward the hallway.

Emma’s bedroom was at the back of the house, past the linen closet and the framed family photos Daniel always said were crooked but never fixed.

It was not a scary room.

Sarah had made sure of that.

The walls were cream, the curtains were soft blue, and a little moon lamp sat on the dresser so Emma would never wake up in total darkness.

There were storybooks lined up on white shelves, a stuffed rabbit that had been repaired twice, and a full-size bed Daniel had bought with a grin, saying their daughter deserved to sleep like a queen.

Emma had slept alone since she was four.

Not because Sarah wanted her to grow up too fast, but because Emma had been proud of it.

She used to pat the mattress and announce, “This is my big-girl bed.”

Now she stood in the kitchen like the bed had turned against her.

Sarah crouched down and brushed the hair from Emma’s face.

“Did you have a bad dream?”

Emma looked at the floor.

“I don’t know.”

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