My Wife Thought I Had Become Someone Else — Then The Baby Monitor Showed My Brother-thuyhien

Evan reached the seventh stair before I understood why Claire had looked at me like that.

Not scared.

Prepared.

Image

Her bare feet had already turned toward the garage door. Caleb’s blanket was tight around his tiny body, and the baby monitor’s red light pulsed between her fingers like a warning. She did not cry anymore. Her mouth pressed into a thin line, the way it did when she was counting medication doses during nursing school.

That steadiness saved us.

I kept the phone low against my thigh and pressed record. The hallway smelled like lemon cleaner, cold coffee, and the faint sour milk on Caleb’s burp cloth. Rain ticked against the kitchen window below us. The house was too quiet except for Evan’s slow footsteps and the tiny hiccuping breaths coming from my son.

“Mark,” Evan called softly. “Don’t make her panic more than you already have.”

I did not answer.

Claire slid backward into the garage entry. One hand found the knob. The other kept Caleb tucked beneath her chin. Her eyes went once to my left wrist.

Bare.

Downstairs, Evan laughed under his breath.

“I know you’re recording,” he said. “You always do the dramatic thing.”

My thumb stayed on the screen.

At 2:18 a.m., my brother appeared at the top of the stairs wearing my gray hoodie, my sweatpants, and my wedding watch. The stainless steel caught the hallway light. He had pushed his hair back the way I did after a shower. From ten feet away, in bad light, after fear and sleep and a crying baby, he could have passed for me.

Except his smile was wrong.

It was too relaxed.

“Give me the phone,” he said.

Claire’s hand froze on the garage door.

Evan looked past me at her and softened his voice.

“Claire, you know he’s not stable tonight. He already said those things once. I’m trying to help you.”

My teeth pressed together. My jaw ached.

He was still performing.

Even with the watch on his wrist.

Even with her old phone in his hand.

Even with the baby monitor recording everything.

“Take off my watch,” I said.

He glanced down like he had forgotten it was there.

Then he smiled wider.

“You gave it to me.”

Claire made one small sound behind me. Not a sob. More like the air leaving her ribs.

“No,” she said. “He didn’t.”

Evan’s eyes shifted to her.

That was the first crack.

He expected her frightened. Confused. Easy to guide. He did not expect her voice to come out flat and clinical.

“I bought that watch,” she said. “Anniversary. Engraving inside. September 12.”

Read More