Rowan Baxter with his children in Brisbane. File photo / supplied
Hannah Clarke's murderer-husband made a chilling final phone call to his three children the night before he killed them in a horrific murder-suicide.
Rowan Baxter, 42, FaceTimed Laianah, 4, Aaliyah, 6, and Trey, 3, in a "very emotional" state last Tuesday, knowing he would set them on fire and then kill himself hours later.
Clarke's brother Nathaniel spoke about the murders on Australia's ABC 7.30 show, revealing the thing that "cut him the deepest" was knowing Baxter made them suffer to the very end.
"He had a plan that night when he called the kids and he was a blubbering mess. He knew what he was doing then. He had it all planned out, he knew what he was doing the following morning," Nathaniel said.
"He couldn't even do it quick. That's the worst thing. He made them suffer, and her."
Friends said Baxter's horrific attack on his family last Wednesday had been the peak of his "unravelling"', which began when the couple separated late last year.
Clarke's best friend Lou Farmer said the situation finally "came to pieces" on Boxing Day when he kidnapped one of their daughters.
At the time, Clarke had been living with her parents and had suggested taking the kids to the park for a play date.
But just as she was packing up, Baxter suddenly grabbed Laianah and threw her in the back of his car and took off.
"Before he sped off, he said 'this is your fault Hannah', and he took her for four days," Farmer said.
Following the incident Baxter was issued a domestic violence order, which he breached just days later.
Farmer said she had been aware of his controlling behaviour towards Clarke for quite some time, particularly the aggressive manner in which he would speak to her.
"He was one step ahead of her all the time. He knew conversations that she hadn't talked to him about, maybe us or another person. He knew of it and prompted her," Farmer added.
She said Baxter would demand sex from Clarke every night and wouldn't speak to her for days if she didn't comply.
The dad-of-three finally reached a breaking point last Tuesday which was evident in his hysterical phone call with his children.
"He was very emotional, very upset," Farmer's husband Simon told the ABC.
"Hannah noticed there was a distinct change... a high level of emotion, he was crying."