
When Marissa opens the door expecting her husband, she is welcomed with someone who looks precisely like him, but something feels off. What starts out as a terrifying imposter encounter quickly turns into a family secret neither she nor her husband expected. What follows is a tense reckoning that no one is prepared for.
The knock came at 2:07 p.m.
I recall scrubbing the kitchen backsplash, elbow-deep in lemon-scented foam, and wondering if Hayden would remember to pick some oat milk on the way home. He typically did, and he also brought home croissants.

But he wasnโt expected to arrive home for another three hours.
I dried my still damp hands and padded to the door. When I opened it, he stood there. Hayden is dressed in a gray hoodie, his work lanyard still dangling around his neck.
โWhy are you home so early?โ I inquired, my stomach quivering with astonishment. โIs everything okay?โ
My hubby did not kiss me. He simply went inside, his eyes darting around me as if he was attempting to locate the space.
โI wasnโt feeling well, my boss let me go.โ
I slowly shut the door behind him. Something shifted in my chest. Not exactly an alarm, butโฆ off. But he had not kissed me hello. He hadnโt called me โsweetheartโ or โmoonpieโ or any of the other names he regularly used.
He just moved down the hallway like someone seeing it for the first time.
โDid something happen?โ I asked.
He didnโt answer.
I followed him to our bedroom.
โWhat are you looking for?โ I asked.
He paused like heโd only just remembered I was there.
โSomething for work.โ
โThat specific?โ I asked, raising an eyebrow.
โYeah, justโฆ give me a sec, babe.โ
My hubby had never called me that before. not โbabe.โ
Hayden called me โMar,โ or sometimes โMouseโ when he was feeling nice. Never, babe.

I crossed my arms and watched him. Our cat, Waffles, crept through the threshold. She adored Hayden. She always slept cuddled up against his legs at night. But today, she stopped short. Her tail fluffed upward. She hissed.
โDo we still have that thing?โ he questioned, staring at her.
My blood cooled. Hayden would never talk about her like that. In fact, Iโd wager my life that Hayden would prefer Waffles over any other child weโd have.
โHayden,โ I said, selecting my words carefully. โAre you certain youโre okay? Should we go to a doctor? I will drive. Or would you prefer some medicine and soup?โ
He stood up fully then. He smiled like someone trying to remember how.
โDidnโt you move our family stash? I canโt find itโฆ I need it for work.โ
That didnโt even make sense.
โOurโฆ what?โ I gasped.
โThe stash. You knowโฆ the emergency cash we keep?โ
โWe donโt keep cash in the house, honey,โ I said slowly.
โYes, we do.โ โIโm certain you said it was in the bedroom,โ his eyes narrowed.
I had no idea what he was talking about, but I needed to play along. I had to buy myself some time.
โNo, honey,โ I said, my voice low as I backed slowly toward the door. โWe relocated it, remember? After the break-ins down the street, we transferred it to the basementโฆโ
For the first time, he appeared satisfied.
โShow me,โ he asked.
I walked him back downstairs, my heart pounding behind my ribs. I opened the basement door, turned on the light, and moved aside.
โRight there, in the vanity beneath the stairs. Go ahead, Iโll be with you soon. โI just want a drink of water.โ
He paused, then nodded slowly. Then, he passed me, took the first two stepsโฆ
And I slammed the door shut behind him. I turned the lock. For a second, I couldnโt breathe. Then I ran.
I stood on the porch and called Hayden. The real one.
He picked up after just one ring.
โMar? Everything okay?โ he asked.
โThereโs a man in the basement pretending to be you,โ I said. โPlease come home. Now!โ
Silence.

โIโm coming. Marissa, donโt go into the basement. Just make sure the door is locked. Try and jam it from the outside. Call the police. Stay outside.โ
I did precisely as he advised and tried to secure the basement door with an umbrella handle. Then I went outside and sat on the porch, waiting for my husband. Waffles were nowhere to be found.
Hayden arrived twenty minutes later, breathless and pallid. Waffles ran from her hiding place, wrapped around his legs and wagging her tail like a loyalty flag to her father.
โWhat happened?โ he gasped.
I told my husband everything, not realizing my hands shook as I spoke.
We stood in the hallway, listening to the basement. Silence. Whatever fake-Hayden was doing, he sure was being silent about it.
Police came 10 minutes later. The man approached softly, hands raised, no struggle at all.
He looked exactly like my spouse. Itโs as if someone had replicated Haydenโs face but got the soul part wrong. Same brown eyes, but colder. Same mouth, but it never smiled correctly.
Grant. This was his name. We found out afterward.
Grant claimed Hayden had been drinking alone in a bar two months previously. Theyโd locked eyes from across the room, spoken, and exchanged birthdays. They realized they had been born on the same day and in the same city. Grant followed him for several weeks. We learned our routines.
He told the police everything. No struggle, no resistance. Simply a slow, cracked voice.
โI grew up in a group home,โ he explained. โIโve never had a family. โIโve never had a home.โ
The tale unraveled in parts. The hospital. Adoption records. Twins were separated at birth. A clerical error. An full life was missed.
โI never knew all of that,โ Hayden said quietly. He sat next to me, his jaw clinched.
I gazed at Grant; he seemed like a ghost. Or perhaps I was the ghost, seeing someone elseโs life through my own eyes.
Later, once the cops had left and Grant had left, the living room was silent as if it were a second ceiling. Hayden sat on the edge of the couch, his hands resting between his knees. He chose not to press charges, but Grant had already left with the police, who were going to drop him off at his place of stay.
โWhy didnโt you tell me?โ I asked. โYou met someone who looked exactly like you. Same birthday. Same city. And you didnโt think I should know?โ

โI didnโt think it was real,โ he said. โI thought the guy was full of shit. People say all kinds of stuff at bars.โ
โHayden! He looks exactly like you! Not to mention that he showed up in our houseโฆ There was a stranger in our bedroom. Asking about money. Walking around like he owned the place. He called me โbabe.โโ
Hayden looked up.
โEven Waffles saw something was awry. She snarled at Hayden. Sheโs never growled at anyone except the delivery people.โ
He opened his mouth, but I continued.
โI was afraid, OK? For five minutes, I believed I was losing my mind. He looked precisely like you, yet he was not you. He was hollow. And I was alone in the house with him.โ
Hayden dropped his head into his hands.
โIโm sorry, Mar,โ he said. โI shouldโve said somethingโฆ I justโฆโ
โWhat?โ I demanded. Gone was the worried wife. Gone was the scared Marissa.
Now, I was just angry.
โI didnโt want to believe it,โ he said. โThat someone out there lived the same life as me, minus all the good parts. That I got you, and a home, and a jobโฆ and he gotโฆ nothing. He got none of this. He just bounced around the system. It made me feel sick.โ
His voice broke a little, and it cracked something open in me, too.
โI didnโt want to say it out loud,โ he whispered. โBecause the second I did, it became real. And I didnโt know what to do with that.โ

I didnโt answer. I just walked over and sat beside him. We stared straight ahead, not touching.
โNext time,โ I said finally. โIf thereโs ever anything that feels even remotely dangerous, or weird, or even just offโฆ you tell me.โ
โI will,โ he said. โI swear. I promise.โ
โAnd for the record,โ I muttered. โYouโre never allowed to call me โbabe.โโ
A tiny laugh escaped him.
โNoted.โ
Even after all of that, my husband maintained communication with Grant. When he talked about his brother, I noticed something in his voice that I had never heard before. Something cracked.
The following week, Hayden offered Grant a position at the warehouse where he worked.
โWe need packers and people to take stock, Mouse,โ he told me. โThat way heโll earn an income, you know?โ
โBut heโs not staying with us,โ I told my husband, as I made salsa. โThis isnโt some long-lost reunion movie.โ
โI know,โ Hayden said. โBut heโs still my brother. And we have no parents. That means Iโm responsible for him, Marissa.โ
โYes, but Iโm still recovering from the incident, Hayden. Give me a second to catch my breath.โ
My husband nodded.
โI donโt expect you to forgive him,โ my spouse explained. โBut Iโm not going to pretend that he doesnโt exist.โ
Several days later, we invited Grant to supper.
I cooked more than was required, including roast lamb with lemon and rosemary, mashed potatoes, a beet and walnut salad, and a sourdough loaf that I had started two days earlier.
He wore clean clothes. Still Haydenโs face, but with a different posture, slouched shoulders, and a guarded sort of stillness.
โThis smells good,โ he said.
Tense. Flat. Still, something in him shifted as the wine bottle emptied.
Midway through dessert, a chocolate torte, he cleared his throat.
โI know you didnโt have to do this. Either of you.โ
I didnโt respond. I focused on the cherry ice cream in front of me.
โYouโre not alone anymore,โ Hayden said. โThat matters. That counts for something. Iโll help you find an apartment soon.โ
Grantโs eyes flicked toward me.
โYou cooked like someone who wanted me to feel welcomeโฆ thank you.โ
I grinned and nodded. What else would I do? I needed time to process the dramatic changes in our lives.
Later, after he departed and the dishes were done, I returned to the window. Hayden threw his arms around me from behind.
โI know itโs messy,โ he said.
โItโs real,โ I said.

Weeks have passed. Hayden would periodically check in on Grant. A text. Get a ride to work. Grant never went near the house again.
Even when Hayden is sleeping, I occasionally look through the security footage. I observe that version of him, the one who entered like him. The one who had somehow obtained a lanyard from Haydenโs workplaceโฆ
It was all quite bizarre. But I trusted my husband. And I knew he wouldnโt hurt me.
And occasionally I recall Grantโs expression across the dinner table, when he discovered he wasnโt alone in the world.
Mostly, though, I watch Waffles curl up on Haydenโs feet and take it easy.
She still recognizes the difference. And so do I.
The post While My Husband Was at Work, the Twin We Never Knew About Came Home Pretending to Be Him first appeared on Soulfy.
