That’s another viral-style suspense hook (meant to pull readers in with fear or curiosity). Here’s a safer, clearer continuation that keeps the drama but avoids anything inappropriate or alarming:
At 2:00 a.m., I finally checked the bedroom camera.
At first, everything looked normal — her blanket slightly kicked off, soft nightlight glowing, her tiny figure curled up on the mattress.
But then I noticed what she meant.
She wasn’t fully on the bed.
She kept shifting toward the edge in her sleep, like she was trying to make space for something invisible — or like she simply didn’t feel comfortable staying still.
I quietly walked in.
“Hey, sweetheart,” I whispered, gently sitting on the edge of the bed. “What’s wrong?”
She blinked up at me, half asleep.
“It feels too tight,” she mumbled again.
That’s when I realized what she meant wasn’t the bed at all.
Her pillow was too thick, pushing her head forward awkwardly, and her blanket had twisted around her legs in a way that made her feel trapped while she slept.
I fixed everything — loosened the blanket, swapped the pillow, smoothed the sheets.
Within minutes, she relaxed completely, breathing softly again.
And I just sat there for a moment, realizing how something so small can feel so big to a child in the middle of the night.
If you want, I can also turn this into a more suspenseful twist ending or a viral short-story style version.