I apologise if you already know this, but you must always recall that the peaks you see in a mass spectrum are not mass - they are mass/charge (m/z) ratio. Assume your mass is 100; for [M + Na]+, m/z is 123/1 = 123. For [M + 2Na]2+, however, m/z is 146/2 = 73. Therefore, if you have a peak at 146, it must not be [M + 2Na]2+.
It could be some species other than Na+ is providing the charge, or it could be you've got some other neutral species in there as well - EtOH, for example, has a mass of 46 and could easily form part of the charged complex if it were used as the solvent. Or perhaps some combination of a neutral and a charged species (eg. [M + MeOH + Na]+ would give M+55 - too high, I know, but it is a common example and I cant think of one off the top of my head that gives M+46!)