Mason frowned as if I had just said something silly.
“Mommy, but Daddy is alive, and he read me a story yesterday.”
The way he said it sent a cold shiver down my spine.
He wasn’t pretending.
He believed it.
That afternoon, I kept thinking about what he’d said.
Was he dreaming?
Imagining things?
Or was losing his father simply too much for his little mind to process?
By evening, I had made a decision.
I dug through the hall closet until I found our old baby monitor camera from when Mason was a newborn. It still worked.
I placed it on a shelf in his bedroom where it could see the bed and the window.
Just in case.
That same evening, I tucked Mason into bed.
He hugged his stuffed dinosaur. I kissed his forehead and turned off the light.
Then I went to my bedroom and opened the baby monitor on my phone.
For hours, I stared at the screen.
Nothing happened.
Mason rolled around a little and then drifted off to sleep, and that was it.
I finally gave up and fell asleep for maybe two hours before my son had to wake up.
The next morning, I asked him casually while pouring juice.
“So… did Daddy come read to you again last night?”
Mason shook his head.
“No.”
He didn’t seem upset about it either.
Just matter-of-fact.
I felt both relieved and confused.
Maybe it really had been his imagination.
Still, I decided to leave the camera running for a few more days.
Just to be sure.
Two nights later, I sat in my bedroom watching the screen again.
The house was silent, and my eyelids kept drooping.
I told myself I would watch for another five minutes before going to bed.
That’s when something happened.
At exactly 1:14 a.m., Mason sat up in bed.
My heart jumped.
He looked toward the window, smiled, and then waved at someone.
I leaned closer to the screen, suddenly wide awake.
Mason climbed out of bed, ran to the window, and pushed the curtain aside.
Then he started talking to someone!
My stomach dropped.
I could barely breathe when I realized who Mason was talking to!
I shot out of bed and ran down the hallway.
My heart pounded so loudly that it drowned out everything else.
Daniel had always kept a baseball bat under our bed after someone tried to break into a house down the street a few years ago. Without thinking, I grabbed it before leaving my room.
As I reached Mason’s door, I heard, “Daddy, are you going to read the dragon story tonight?”
I pushed the door open.
And froze.
A man was standing beside Mason’s bed.
He looked exactly like Daniel!
For a second, my brain refused to process what I was seeing.
The man wore one of Daniel’s fairy-tale costumes, the old knight outfit.
And he was holding one of Mason’s storybooks.
My hands tightened around the baseball bat.
“What are you doing in my son’s room!”
The man’s eyes widened, and he immediately raised both hands.
“Please don’t swing that thing,” he said quickly.
“I can explain.”
But I was already stepping between him and Mason.
My voice came out sharp and shaking.
Behind me, Mason looked confused.
“Mommy?”
I didn’t take my eyes off the stranger.
“Mason, sweetheart, stay right there.”
Then I pointed the bat straight at the man.
“You’re coming with me. Right now!”
“Okay… okay.”
I backed toward the door, keeping the bat raised.
“Move!”
He stepped into the hallway.
My heart was still racing, and my mind kept repeating the same terrifying thought.
The man had Daniel’s face, but my husband was dead.
And I was about to find out who this stranger really was.
I marched him toward the living room.
Behind us, I heard Mason whisper, “Mommy?”
“It’s okay!” I called back without turning around. “Stay in your room!”
He hesitated for a moment, then said softly, “Okay.”
I waited until we reached the living room before I finally spoke again.
“Stop right there.”
The man stopped.
He looked so much like Daniel that it hurt. Not just similar.
Identical.
I tightened my grip on the bat.
“You’ve got five seconds to explain why you were sneaking into my son’s room dressed like my dead husband.”
He kept his hands raised.
“I wasn’t trying to scare anyone.”
“Oh, you weren’t?” I snapped. “Because breaking into a child’s bedroom in the middle of the night feels pretty terrifying to me!”
“I know,” he said quietly. “And I’m sorry.”
He hesitated for a moment.
“My name is Derrick.”
The name meant nothing to me.
“I’m Daniel’s twin brother.”
My first reaction was anger.
Daniel had never mentioned a brother.
I stepped closer, raising the bat again.
“That’s impossible!”
He nodded slowly.
“I figured you’d say that.”
Without making any sudden movements, he reached slowly into his back pocket.
“I’m just grabbing my wallet.”
He pulled out a worn leather wallet and slid a driver’s license across the coffee table toward me.
I picked it up and scanned the card. He had Daniel’s last name and the same date of birth.
The room spun for a moment.
I dropped onto the couch, still gripping the bat.
“Daniel never told me he had a twin brother.”
Derrick gave a sad, half-smile.
“That’s because he thought it was better if you didn’t know.”
My voice hardened again.
“Why?”
He let out a slow breath.
“Because I spent the past 20 years in prison.”
I stared at him.
“When we were teenagers, Daniel and I weren’t exactly angels,” he continued. “We got into trouble a lot.
Stupid stuff mostly. Skipping school, pulling pranks, stealing snacks from gas stations.”
His eyes dropped to the floor.
“Then one night we found a black plastic bag stuffed under a car. Inside were tens of thousands of dollars.”
“So you took it?”
He nodded.
“We were stupid kids.
We thought we’d just hit the jackpot. But the money was stolen from a bank,” Derrick continued. “Some of the bills had tracking devices.”
I could already see where this was going.
“The police tracked the money.
Right to us.”
He rubbed his hands together slowly.
“Daniel and I were walking down the street that night when a squad car pulled up. I was carrying the bag,” he said.
His voice softened.
“I told Daniel to run. I stayed and took the fall.”
He shrugged slightly.
“I was the one holding the bag.
It made sense. And Daniel got away.”
The room remained quiet for a long moment.
Finally, I asked, “Did you tell the police about Daniel?”
Derrick shook his head.
“Why not?”
“Because he was my brother. We were adopted,” he added.
“We didn’t have parents who could hire lawyers or help us out.”
“So you went to prison alone.”
“Yeah. But Daniel came to see me once,” Derrick continued. “I told him to forget about me.”
My eyebrows lifted.
“I didn’t want his life ruined because of my mistakes.
But he didn’t listen, not exactly.”
Derrick reached into his jacket and pulled out a folded envelope.
“I kept every letter he sent me.”
My heart skipped.
“He wrote to you?”
“All the time.”
Derrick unfolded the paper and held it carefully.
