Ivy sensed trouble when three babysitters left after one day. She concealed a camera in her living room, and the footage shocked her. The cereal spoon in a half-full bowl sparkled in the early sunshine streaming through the kitchen curtains.
As my son Noah babbled happily, I wiped applesauce from his chin, blissfully oblivious that I was seconds from losing it. My phone buzzed again on the counter. No need to search.
Already knew. Still, I examined screen. Bella, our new babysitter, writes:
“Hi Ivy, Sorry, I won’t continue with your family.
Thank you for understanding.”
The end. No explanation. Nothing indicates what went wrong.
Standing still, I read the message again, thinking I misinterpreted it. But it was obvious—babysitter number four in two weeks had left us. I saw my five-year-old daughter Mia singing while constructing a block tower in the living room.
Noah lumbered over to her and shrieked with joy when she let him knock it down. Good kids—kind, playful, never destructive or unpleasant. Why did all sitters leave after 48 hours?
A creaky front door opened. With a tray of lattes, my best friend Natalie entered. I smiled weakly as she gave me mine.
“Bad timing?” she questioned. “Perfect timing,” I sighed, sitting down. Raising an eyebrow.
What now? I gave her my phone. While reading Bella’s letter, she whistled softly.
“That’s the fourth, right?”
I nodded. “And I can’t understand. All of them are amazing—I interview and verify references.
Without warning, they quit.”
Natalie sipped her coffee slowly, thinking. “You don’t think it’s the kids?”
“No,” I insisted. Mia is courteous and Noah is a handful, but he’s two.
That’s normal. Something else is happening.”
Leaning forward, Natalie What about Eli? I blinked.
“What about him?”
“Well,” she responded slowly, “has anyone ever quit while he was away?”
The question impacted me harder than intended. I recalled. Eli was home every time someone departed.
Every time. My stomach twisted. I answered, “No way,” laughing.
“He’s stressed lately. But he’s not like that.”
Natalie stared at me without speaking. Something about the stillness worried me more than words.
Later that night, Eli snored next me in bed. It kept running through my mind. Could he be why?
Was it possible? I doubted it. But I needed the truth.
When Eli departed for work the following morning, I searched our closet for Mia’s baby nanny cam. I positioned it on the living room bookshelf to capture everything without being noticeable. Not paranoid anymore.
The topic was replies. I found another sitter by noon. Clara was pleasant, cheerful, and ready to begin.
She instantly connected with the kids, and I thought maybe this time would be different. I didn’t work. I watched the nanny cam on my phone in my vehicle down the block.
First hour went well. Clara entertained Mia, bounced Noah on her hip, and cleaned up their toys. My shoulders relaxed gently.
Eli returned home. I sat up straighter, heart racing. He entered with his customary elegance, making Clara grin.
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