My 5-Year-Old Son Blurted Out That Our New Nanny Always Locks Herself In My Bedroom – So I Came Home Early Without Warning
I turned off the faucet and dried my hands slowly. “Why would I hide in there, Mason?”
He stared at the floor. “Because that’s where Alice always hides. She locks herself in, and I hear noises. But it’s our secret, Mom. I promised her,” he added, his voice dropping on the last words.
My dish towel hit the counter, and every instinct I had fired at once.
“She locks herself in and I hear noises.”
I crouched down to his level. “Sweetheart, how often does Alice hide in my room?”
“Every day!”
I kept my voice calm, told Mason gently that secrets between adults and children weren’t something we did in our family, and sent him back to his room with a hug. The moment he was gone, I walked straight to my bedroom.
Everything looked fine at first. Bed made. Curtains straight. Pillows stacked the way I always left them.
But something was off, and it took me a moment to name it.
Everything looked fine at first.
The bedspread was folded at the corner. I always tucked mine flat. And the room smelled heavily of my good perfume, the one I kept for special occasions. I opened my closet and went through it slowly, hanger by hanger.
Then I stopped.
The Paris dress was gone. I hadn’t even taken the tags off. My husband had carried it home from his business trip. I hadn’t worn it. I hadn’t shown it to anyone. I’d been saving it for something special.
The Paris dress was gone.
Alice had been wearing my clothes in my bedroom while I was at work, and my son was counting to 50 in the hallway. And the question that was haunting me wasn’t just what Alice was doing in there.
It was whether she was doing it alone.
I called my best friend that night after Mason was in bed, pacing the kitchen with the lights low and my voice down.
“Sheryl,” she said slowly over the phone, when I finally stopped talking, “what if it’s not just Alice?”
Alice had been wearing my clothes in my bedroom.
“Don’t,” I said sharply, pressing my palm against the counter.
“I’m just saying… your husband’s been working late. You mentioned he’s been unusually cheerful in the mornings.”
“I said don’t,” I told her, squeezing my eyes shut.
I didn’t want to think about it. I refused to think about it. Not him. Not in our own… bedroom.
But that night, lying in bed staring at the ceiling while my husband slept next to me, I couldn’t stop the thoughts from coming. I reached for my phone and searched for small hidden cameras.
“I’m just saying… your husband’s been working late.”
Earliest delivery — three weeks out.
Three weeks. And every single day, according to my five-year-old, the hide-and-seek game was still going on.
I sat up in the dark and made a decision by morning: I wasn’t waiting three weeks for anything.
I went through the motions. Watched my husband back out of the driveway, coffee mug in hand, humming something low and easy. I dropped Mason at school, drove to the office, and sat at my desk.
I wasn’t waiting three weeks for anything.
At noon, I packed up my bag, told my boss I was running a fever, and walked to my car.
On the drive home, I called my husband. He answered on the third ring, his voice slightly distracted. And underneath it — music, and a woman laughing in the background.
“Hey! Everything okay?” he asked.
“Yeah, I just wasn’t feeling well. Are you in the middle of something?” I asked, listening more to the background than to him.
On the drive home, I called my husband.
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