One evening, we asked our 2.5-year-old daughter a simple question: “How many people live in our house?” We expected her to say four—me, my husband, her, and her baby brother. Instead, she answered immediately: “Five.” We laughed, assuming she meant the cat. But she shook her head.
“No. Mommy, Daddy, me, little brother… and…” She pointed toward the hallway. An empty hallway. My husband and I exchanged uneasy looks. “Who, sweetheart?” I asked carefully.
“The nice lady,” she whispered. “She sings to me when I can’t sleep.” The room fell silent. For days, her words stayed with me. Kids her age imagine all kinds of things, but something about the way she said it unsettled me. Then I remembered something. My grandmother—who passed away long before my daughter was born—used to sing a specific lullaby every night when I was little. A lullaby I had never sung to my daughter.
And yet, a few nights later, I heard her humming that exact tune as she drifted off to sleep. I stood in her doorway, heart tight in my chest. Was it coincidence? Something she heard somewhere? Just childhood imagination? I don’t know. Maybe I never will. But as I tucked her in that night, she smiled at the empty corner of the room, as if someone stood there watching over her.
And I felt it—soft, familiar, comforting. Family isn’t always counted in the people we see. Sometimes love lingers. Sometimes it stays close, in ways we don’t fully understand. And maybe my daughter was right. Maybe there are five of us in this house.