New Nanny Counts Eight Drops in a Boy’s Drink and Exposes the Truth-congtien

“Dad, please—cut me open!”

That was what Ethan Caldwell heard at 2:17 in the morning, and for one terrible second he could not tell if the sound had come from his dream or from the end of the hall.

Then Noah screamed again.

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The Hamptons house changed shape around the sound.

The glass chandelier in the upstairs hallway trembled.

The polished oak floor felt freezing under Ethan’s bare feet as he ran with his phone in one hand and his shirt half-buttoned from the charity dinner he had been too tired to undress from.

Nine-year-old Noah was on the carpet beside his bed, curled so tightly he looked smaller than he was.

His pajama shirt had twisted above his stomach, and his little fingers were digging into his skin hard enough to leave red crescent marks.

“Get them out!” Noah screamed.

Ethan fell to his knees beside him.

“Noah, stop scratching. Look at me. Breathe.”

“I can’t!” Noah sobbed. “I can feel them moving!”

Ethan caught his wrists before he could hurt himself more.

His son’s skin was slick with sweat.

The room smelled of warm cotton, night air, and the faint chocolate sweetness from the mug still sitting on the dresser.

No child screams like that for attention.

That was the sentence Ethan did not say aloud because saying it would have meant admitting the doctors might be wrong.

It had happened three times that week.

Six times that month.

Every time, Ethan had carried Noah into a car or called a doctor or sat beside another hospital bed while his son shook and begged someone to cut him open.

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