Every night my husband went to sleep in our daughter’s room. At first I didn’t think much of it, but one day I decided to hide a camera in her room, and when I watched the recording, I nearly lost consciousness from horror
I always considered myself a good mother. After my first divorce, I promised myself that I would never again allow anyone to hurt my daughter. I lived only for her, trying to control everything that could affect her in any way.
Three years later, Max entered our lives. He was calm, caring, and fifteen years older than me. He treated Emma with such warmth and attention, as if she were his own daughter. For the first time in a long while, I thought that maybe this is what a real home looks like — calm and safe.
Last spring, Emma turned seven. From early childhood, she had problems with sleep. She often woke up at night screaming, trembling, sometimes sleepwalking. At times she would simply sit up in bed and stare into the hallway, as if she saw someone there. I blamed everything on her difficult past and was convinced that love would fix everything with time.
But it didn’t get better.
After a few months, I began to notice something strange. Almost every night around midnight, Max would get out of our bed. He always whispered the same thing: that his back hurt and it would be more comfortable on the couch. I believed him… until the night I woke up and couldn’t find him anywhere.
The couch was empty. The kitchen was dark. The house — too quiet.
And then I noticed a strip of light under Emma’s door.
I looked inside. Max was lying next to her, his arm around her shoulders, as if he had been there for a long time.
— Max? — I called softly.
He startled and opened his eyes.
— She had another nightmare. I just wanted to stay close to her, — he said calmly.
In words, everything sounded right. Like care. Like the act of a good person. But inside me, everything tightened, as if something was screaming: “This is wrong.”
The next day, without explaining anything to anyone, I bought a small hidden camera and installed it in Emma’s room — high up, where no one would think to look.
A few days later, I turned on the recording. And I froze in horror. Continuation in the first comment
In the video, Emma suddenly sat up in bed. Her eyes were wide open, but her gaze was empty, as if she wasn’t looking at the walls, but through them. Her lips were moving; she was whispering something into the darkness.
Max leaned toward her and answered quietly, barely moving his lips. From the outside, it looked as if they were talking to a third, invisible person.
A chill ran through me. I didn’t sleep all night, replaying the recording over and over again. In the morning, I talked to Max.
And I heard the truth, which didn’t bring relief, only more pain. It turned out that for several nights Emma had been waking up from severe nightmares, crying and unable to fall back asleep. Max simply went to her so she wouldn’t be alone and wouldn’t be afraid.
I told him that this couldn’t continue. Even if the intentions were good, this way was wrong. We needed to find another solution.
The next day, I made an appointment for Emma with a child psychologist. I was determined to understand what was happening with my daughter and where her nighttime fears were coming from.


