I had barely finished giving birth when my world shrank to the smallest, strangest details: the sting of antiseptic on my skin, the scratch of hospital sheets against my legs, the dull tremor in my arms from holding myself together through hours of pain. The room smelled like clean metal and warm cotton, threaded with that faint, unreal sweetness that seems to follow newborns like a promise. Nurses had just taken my baby boy for routine checks, and in the quiet that followed, I was floating between exhaustion and relief, half convinced the worst was behind me. My husband, Mark Reynolds, had stepped out to take a phone call, his voice fading into the hallway as if the world outside our door still existed normally. For a brief moment it was only me and my eight-year-old daughter, Emily Carter, standing beside the bed like a tiny guard who refused to look away.
I remember thinking how big her eyes looked under the harsh hospital lights, how she kept rubbing her fingers together as if trying to wipe off an invisible fear. She leaned down close to my face, so close I could feel the heat of her breath, and she whispered with a trembling urgency that didn’t belong in a place designed for healing. “Mom… get under the bed. Now.” There was no playfulness in her voice, no childish drama, none of the imagination that usually turns ordinary spaces into castles or monster caves. This was raw fear—adult fear—compressed into a child’s whisper. I tried to smile, tried to brush it off because the only thing my body wanted was rest. “Emily,” I murmured weakly, “what are you talking about?” She shook her head hard, as if even explaining would waste time we didn’t have.