My 8-year-old kept telling me her bed felt “too tight.” At 2:00 a.m., the camera

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I could clearly see the mattress rise ever so slightly before settling back down. My heart pounded as I watched, feeling a cold sweat break out on my skin. Was it an optical illusion, or was something really there?

I zoomed in on the screen, trying to make sense of the eerie movement. Then it happened again. The mattress lifted, a subtle but definite inch upward before relaxing back into place.

It was as though an invisible hand was gently pressing against it from below. Desperate to reassure myself, I tried to come up with a rational explanation. Maybe there was a draft causing the blanket to billow, or the frame was somehow expanding and contracting in the night air.

But no, those explanations didn’t fit what I was seeing. The next day, I didn’t mention the incident to Mia. I didn’t want to scare her or make her even more anxious about sleeping in her room.

But I couldn’t shake the feeling of unease. I needed to know more. So, I decided to conduct a little experiment.

Before Mia went to bed the next night, I placed a few lightweight items on different spots of her mattress—a small stuffed animal, a paperback book, and a toy block. They were strategically placed so that, if the mattress moved again, I would see it. That night, I barely slept.

I kept the phone clutched in my hand, checking the feed every so often. Around 2:00 a.m., my phone buzzed again. Another motion alert.

I held my breath as I opened the app. This time, the movement was more pronounced. The stuffed animal rolled slightly to the side, the book shifted, and the toy block tipped over.

My heart raced as I realized this was no longer a child’s figment of imagination. Something real was happening. The question was: what?

I decided to take a more direct approach. The following day, with Mia at school and Eric at work, I sat on the floor by her bed, feeling the wooden floorboards with my hands. They seemed solid enough, but one corner felt oddly loose, slightly raised compared to the others.

I pried it open with a screwdriver, revealing a dusty crawl space beneath the floor. The dark void gaped up at me, and I felt a chill creep up my spine. Inside, I found old pipes, some cobwebs, and a few scattered papers—remnants of an old house that had once stood here, maybe.

But there was something else, too—an old, forgotten hatch that led somewhere deeper, somewhere unknown. I quickly decided to have that space professionally inspected, prioritizing Mia’s safety above all. After all, children have a way of sensing things we adults can’t always see or understand fully.

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