My 5-Year-Old Daughter Asked Why ‘Mr. Tom’ Only Comes at Night When I’m Asleep – I Don’t Know Any Toms, So I Set Up a Camera in Her Room and Waited

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The problem was, I didn’t know anyone named Tom.

So I installed a camera in her bedroom.

What I saw on that footage made the air leave my lungs.

It all began the way most frightening things do—casually, in the middle of an ordinary moment. A random Wednesday morning over cereal.

Ellie sat at the kitchen table eating a bowl of Cheerios with the intense concentration she applies to everything she does. Without even looking up, she said, “Mr.

Tom thinks you work too much, Mommy.”

I slowly set my coffee mug down. “Who’s Mr. Tom?”

“He checks on me!” she said brightly, as if that explained everything.

I assumed it was an imaginary friend.

Ellie has a whole universe in her imagination. So I let it slide.

That was my first mistake.

About a week later, she stopped me in my tracks.

I was brushing her hair before bed while we both looked at each other in the bathroom mirror. She frowned at her reflection and asked, “Mom, why does Mr.

Tom only come when you’re asleep?”

The brush froze in my hand.

“What do you mean, when I’m asleep?”

“He comes at night,” she said calmly. “He checks the window first. Then he talks to me for a bit.”

Every muscle in my body locked.

“Ellie, sweetheart, what does Mr.

Tom look like?”

She considered the question carefully, the way she always does.

“He’s old. He smells like a garage. And he walks real slow.” She paused.

“He says not to wake you.”

“Will he come tonight?” I asked, trying to keep the fear out of my voice.

I didn’t sleep that night.

After Ellie went to bed, I walked through the house room by room, checking every door and window twice.

Eventually I sat on the couch with my phone in my lap, running through every neighbor, every parent from daycare, every man I’d ever met named Tom.

Nothing.

It had to be Ellie’s imagination.

Then, at 1:13 a.m., I heard it.

The faintest sound somewhere down the hallway. A soft tap—like a single knuckle barely brushing glass.

Once.

Then silence.

I sat completely frozen, telling myself it was a tree branch. The house settling.

Anything except what my instincts were screaming.

By the time I finally forced myself down the hallway, Ellie’s room was quiet.

The hallway was empty.

But her curtain was moving.

There was no wind.

Not even the slightest breeze.

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