It was past midnight when my husband and I, convinced we had found a hidden camera in our Airbnb, decided to take action.
The small, blinking device on the ceiling seemed suspicious, so my husband covered it with a towel. Satisfied with our problem-solving skills, we went to bed.
At 2 a.m., the door suddenly burst open. The Airbnb owner stormed in, furious and out of breath. “You idiots, this is a fire alarm!” he shouted.
My husband and I sat up, completely disoriented. The owner, a man in his late fifties, stood in the doorway wearing a Hawaiian-print shirt that felt wildly inappropriate for the chaos unfolding. He pointed at the towel-covered device.
“Do you have any idea what you’ve done?!”
I blinked. “Wait, what?”
With an exasperated groan, he marched over and yanked off the towel, revealing—not a hidden camera—but a perfectly normal fire alarm with a small blinking light.
“This isn’t some secret spy device,” he snapped. “It’s a smoke detector. A legal requirement for rental properties! You covered it, which triggered a system alert that woke me up and brought me here in the middle of the night!”
My husband, still groggy, tried to defend our logic. “Well… it was blinking. That looked suspicious.”
The owner let out a sharp laugh. “It blinks because it’s working! You know what would be suspicious? If it didn’t blink!”
That… actually made sense.
An awkward silence filled the room as embarrassment settled over us.
“Look,” I finally said, trying to sound reasonable. “We’ve heard so many stories about hidden cameras in Airbnbs. We were just being cautious.”
The owner sighed, rubbing his temples. “I get it, I do. But tell me—if I were secretly recording you, do you really think I’d put the camera in plain sight? In the middle of the ceiling?”
My husband and I exchanged guilty glances.
“Well… when you put it like that,” I muttered.
The owner threw up his hands. “Thank you!”
Trying to change the subject, I hesitated. “Uh… so, you said the system alerted you? Does that mean—”
“Yes,” he cut in. “It means I got a 2 a.m. call from my security system telling me the fire alarm was malfunctioning. I had to get out of bed, drive all the way here, and barge into my own Airbnb like a lunatic—just to stop you from accidentally suffocating yourselves in your sleep.”
“Suffocating?” I repeated.
“Yes! Covering a fire alarm is dangerous! If there had been an actual fire, it wouldn’t have detected the smoke in time.”
Silence.
I let out a weak chuckle. “Okay, so… big misunderstanding.”
The owner groaned. “Yeah. You think?”
My husband, ever the optimist, shrugged. “Hey, at least now you know your system works.”
The owner just stared at him. “That’s… not how this works.”
Sensing we had tested his patience enough, I quickly apologized. “We’re really sorry. We panicked.”
The owner took a deep breath, clearly forcing himself to move on. “Fine. Just—” he pointed at the alarm, “leave it alone. Please.”
We nodded enthusiastically.
“Good. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going home to try to salvage my sleep schedule.” He turned and grumbled his way out the door, slamming it behind him.
For a moment, we just sat there, staring at the now towel-free, definitely not a hidden camera smoke detector.
Then my husband turned to me. “So, uh… should we mention this in our review?”
I whacked him with a pillow. “Absolutely not.”
The Lesson?
Paranoia can make fools of us all. It’s good to be cautious, but maybe double-check before assuming someone is running a secret surveillance operation. Also, if something is blinking, it’s probably just doing its job.
Lesson learned.
(And yes, we left the owner a very apologetic review.)