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Husband's Twin Deception Novel Cover

Husband's Twin Deception

The phone call came at 3:47 PM, piercing through the quiet afternoon like a blade. Griffin's voice, strained and shaky, crackled through the speaker. "Layla, I need you to come to St. Mary's Hospital. There's been an accident." My hands trembled as I grabbed my purse, my heart hammering against my ribs. The drive to the hospital blurred past in a haze of panic and prayer. Please let him be okay. Please let him be okay. The mantra repeated in my mind as I navigated through traffic, my knuckles white against the steering wheel. The emergency room buzzed with controlled chaos—nurses rushing past, monitors beeping, the antiseptic smell burning my nostrils.
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Chapter 2

Three sleepless days passed after the hospital incident. Three days of pretending everything was normal while Griffin's recovery kept him mostly bedridden, giving me the freedom I desperately needed to investigate.

I started with the basics—online public records, social media, anything that might explain the name Easton Wells. What I found made my blood run cold.

Easton Wells existed. He had his own driver's license, his own credit cards, his own social media profiles. But the addresses matched ours. The bank accounts were shared. Even more disturbing, there were photos of him at places I remembered visiting with Griffin—the same restaurants, the same vacation spots, even inside our own home.

My hands shook as I scrolled through Easton's Facebook profile. There he was, standing in our kitchen just last month, wearing the exact shirt I'd bought Griffin for his birthday. The timestamp showed he'd posted it on a Tuesday—the same Tuesday Griffin claimed he was working late at the office.

The pieces crashed together with sickening clarity. The nights Griffin came home smelling different. The subtle changes in his mannerisms that I'd dismissed as stress. The way he sometimes seemed surprised by conversations we'd supposedly had.

Because they weren't the same person.

That evening, I found Griffin sitting up in bed, scrolling through his phone. The bandage was gone from his forehead, revealing only a small cut that had already begun to heal. For the first time in our marriage, I looked at him and saw a stranger.

"Griffin," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "We need to talk."

He looked up, and something flickered in his eyes. Wariness. "Of course. What's on your mind?"

I pulled the printed pages from behind my back—screenshots, public records, photos. I laid them on the bed between us like evidence at a trial. "Who is Easton Wells?"

The silence stretched between us, heavy and suffocating. Griffin's expression didn't change, but his knuckles whitened as he gripped his phone.

"I don't know what you're talking about," he said finally, his voice flat and cold.

"Don't." The word came out sharper than I intended. "Don't you dare lie to me anymore. I found everything. The shared bank accounts, the photos, the social media posts. He's been in our house, Griffin. In our bed."

Griffin set his phone aside with deliberate care. When he looked at me again, the man I thought I knew was completely gone. In his place sat someone calculating, distant, almost amused.

"You've been busy," he said.

"Five years," I whispered, my voice cracking. "Five years of marriage, and you've been lying to my face every single day. Who is he? Where is he?"

"He's my brother. My twin brother."

The casual way he said it—like he was commenting on the weather—sent a chill down my spine. "Your brother. Your twin brother who you never once mentioned in five years of marriage."

"You couldn't handle the complexity of our arrangement."

Arrangement. The word hit me like a slap. "Arrangement? What kind of arrangement involves deceiving your wife about your identity?"

Griffin sighed, as if I were being unreasonably dramatic. "It was for your own protection, Layla. You're too fragile for the truth. Too naive. We thought it would be easier this way."

"Easier for who?" I was standing now, though I didn't remember getting up. "Easier for you to manipulate me? To make me question my own sanity?"

"It was never about manipulation—"

"Then what was it about?" I screamed, all my composure finally shattering. "What possible reason could you have for—"

The front door slammed shut downstairs. Heavy footsteps echoed through the house, moving toward the stairs with familiar confidence. My blood turned to ice as I realized what was happening.

Griffin looked toward the bedroom door, and for the first time since our conversation began, genuine emotion crossed his face. Regret. Maybe even fear.

The footsteps reached the top of the stairs. The bedroom door opened.

And there he was.

Identical. Exactly, perfectly identical. Same dark hair, same blue eyes, same strong jawline. He wore different clothes—a navy sweater I'd never seen before—but everything else was exactly the same. Even the way he moved, the way he held his shoulders.

I stared between them, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. Two faces that had been one face. Two men who had been one husband.

"Layla," the newcomer said softly, and his voice was Griffin's voice, exactly Griffin's voice. "I'm so sorry you found out this way."

My legs gave out. I collapsed into the chair by the window, staring at both of them—my husband and his identical twin, standing side by side in our bedroom like some twisted mirror image.

"This isn't real," I whispered. "This can't be real."

Easton—it had to be Easton—stepped forward, his hands raised as if approaching a frightened animal. "It's real, and I know how it looks, but please let me explain. What we did was wrong, but it was never meant to hurt you."

"Never meant to hurt me?" I laughed, the sound brittle and broken. "You stole five years of my life. You made me question my own memory, my own sanity. How is that not meant to hurt me?"

They stood there, two identical faces wearing different expressions of guilt and defiance, and I realized that every moment of my marriage had been built on a lie so elaborate, so complete, that I didn't even know who I'd been sleeping next to on any given night.

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