At 17, I used to babysit a pair of twins.
The mom and dad were secretive and quiet, but they paid very well.
One night, they didn’t return.
At 4 a.m., I started to really panic.
Then, I turned on the TV—and froze when I saw them.
I discovered that they were on the news. A breaking report. Their faces, clear as day, under the bold headline: Local Couple Arrested in Multi-Million Dollar Embezzlement Scheme.
My heart dropped.
I stared at the screen like I’d misunderstood something. Maybe it was people who looked like them. Maybe I was sleep-deprived.
But it was them. Willa and Dorian Mercer. The couple who hired me every Thursday night to watch their six-year-old twins, Elise and Ezra.
The news anchor said they’d been arrested at a private airfield two hours earlier, trying to board a plane to Panama. Something about offshore accounts and corporate fraud.
Meanwhile, I was sitting in their living room, barefoot, surrounded by empty snack wrappers, with two kids asleep upstairs—kids who had no idea their lives were about to change.
I didn’t know what to do.
Do I call the police? Wait? I had no instructions. Just a note left on the fridge from earlier that night, the same note they always left: “Help yourself to food. Back by midnight. Thank you, Shay.”
But they didn’t come back.
And now I knew why.
Around 5:15 a.m., I called my mom.
I didn’t tell her everything—just that the parents hadn’t come back and I didn’t know what to do. She came over ten minutes later in her robe and slippers. When she saw the news coverage, she covered her mouth and just whispered, “Oh my God.”
We waited until 6 a.m. and then called Child Protective Services.
I didn’t want to. I felt… weird. Protective, I guess.
The twins were sweet kids. They weren’t bratty or spoiled. Elise loved making crafts, and Ezra always asked me to read the same dinosaur book over and over. They didn’t deserve this.
But what else could I do?
By 7 a.m., a social worker showed up. Her name was Noreen, and she was kind, with gentle eyes and a calm voice. The twins had just woken up, rubbing their eyes and asking if their mommy was making pancakes.
I pulled Noreen aside.
“Do they know anything?” I asked.
She gave me a look—half sadness, half exhaustion. “Not yet. That’s going to fall on me.”
I remember Elise clinging to me when they were about to leave. She didn’t want to go. Ezra looked confused, scared. They kept asking where their parents were.
It was one of the hardest moments of my life.
After they left, I went home and tried to sleep, but couldn’t. My mind kept spinning. Had I missed the signs? Did I ignore red flags?
They’d always paid me in cash, in neat envelopes. They were never rude, just… distant. I never saw friends come over. No family. Just them and the twins, living in that nice, too-quiet house on Buttonwood Lane.
Over the next few weeks, the story was everywhere.
Apparently, Dorian worked for a biotech firm and had siphoned off millions into fake shell companies. Willa helped. They had fake IDs, passports, the whole thing.
And the kids? They had no clue.
No relatives claimed them. Eventually, they were placed in foster care.
But here’s where things get strange.
About three months later, I got a letter in the mail. No return address. Inside was a handwritten note:
“Shay, thank you for taking care of them. We always trusted you. Please don’t forget them. They are the only innocent ones in this mess. —W”
There was no money. No apology. Just that.
I held onto it for a while, unsure what it meant. Was it guilt? A warning? A plea?
I decided to try and check on the twins.
I found out they’d been placed with a foster family about an hour away. Legally, I had no claim to them, but I wrote a letter to the social worker explaining who I was, that I’d babysat them and just wanted to visit.
I didn’t expect a response.
But I got one.