When Marissa opens the door, expecting her husband, she’s met with a man who looks just like him — but something’s off. What starts as an eerie encounter turns into a shocking family secret.
It was 2:07 p.m. when the knock came. Marissa, mid-cleaning, expected Hayden home hours later — but there he was, hoodie on, lanyard around his neck.
“Why are you home early?” she asked. He didn’t kiss her, didn’t use her usual pet names, just said he wasn’t feeling well and walked in like a stranger.
He rummaged through drawers, asking about an emergency cash stash they never had. Her cat, Waffles, hissed at him — a red flag. Alarmed, Marissa tricked him into the basement and locked him inside, then called the real Hayden.
The imposter came out quietly when the police arrived. His name was Grant — Hayden’s twin, separated at birth. They’d met by chance weeks earlier in a bar, realized they shared a birthday and city, and Grant had followed Hayden since.
Raised in group homes, Grant had no family. His desperate need to belong led him to impersonate the life Hayden had — the home, the wife, even the cat.
Hayden never told Marissa about meeting Grant. “I didn’t want to believe it,” he admitted. “He got nothing, and I got everything.”
Eventually, Hayden helped Grant get a job. Marissa, wary but trying, cooked dinner for him. Tense silence filled the table, but gratitude showed in Grant’s eyes. “You cooked like someone who wanted me to feel welcome,” he said.
After that, Grant kept his distance. Hayden checked in, but he never came back to the house. Marissa, though still unsettled, trusted her husband — and her cat, who curled beside the real Hayden every night.
Waffles still knew the difference. And so did Marissa.