Without seeing the hen, it is hard to know what she is doing, but I strongly suspicion everything is fine. Most likely she knows what she is about, so you shouldn't worry.My Broody's eggs are hatching and she keeps getting up a little and moving them around. Is this normal, it's our first broody?
Unless you actually see a hen threatening to kill a live and healthy chick, or abandon live chicks in the process of hatching to mother already hatched chicks (the curse of staggered setting dates for eggs), or ignore hungry babies to continue to sit on dud eggs, it is best to let momma and mother nature take their course.
Hens do move about a little during the process. I know they must as I have come back and seen various egg shells, and sometimes chicks who died in hatch (as evidenced by a malformed body), pulled away from the nest. I only witness mother stoically sitting as if fixed in stone upon the brood, but I know she must have done the tidying earlier on.
Mom does shuffle and shift a little while the little ones are hatching. They sit half hunched on their legs so that there is a nice little "cave" below them to make room for all the activity, and as stated do some tidying as needed throughout the process. Some first timers seem a bit unsettled by the process occurring below. One of my hens (the May Rhodebar hatch) had a perpetual perplexed look on her face as if to say "what on EARTH is going on down there!" She would occasionally shudder and jump a little at the unexpected commotion. However her instincts told her to sit still, and she indeed stayed the course albeit with apparent great personal trepidation at times.
Just check on them periodically without interfering to make sure all seems well. If a hen truly appears unsettled, there is usually something unsettling her. It can be that ants have gotten into the nest box, or, since its winter, the nest is sodden from rain leakage or frozen. I have intervened occasionally if I have seen the hatch in crisis, but only with great care attempting to disturb as little as possible while addressing the precipitating factor.
Occasionally you can get a hen who is willing to brood but seems to have no common sense that she is to calmly let the little ones hatch beneath her...those can be chick eaters if they get really distressed...but that would be rare.
Keep us posted, and good luck on this hatch. It sounds like you'll have some little fuzzy beaks soon.

Lady of McCamley
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