My wife noticed a blinking light on our Airbnb’s smoke detector. I unscrewed it and found a hidden camera. We packed up and left in a hurry.
I wrote a review to expose the place. A few minutes later, I got a reply:
“You fool, this isn’t even our first recording of you.”
My hands went numb reading that message. I read it out loud, and my wife Nessa stared at me like her brain had hit a wall.
“What do they mean first recording?” she whispered. I had no idea. I couldn’t tell if it was some sick joke or something worse, but we sat in the rental car on the side of the road, hearts pounding, minds racing.
I tried messaging Airbnb support, but all I got was their generic response about “escalating the matter.” We were still parked outside a gas station in some quiet part of Vermont, and the place suddenly felt a little too quiet. Then my phone dinged again. It was a private message.
From the host’s profile. “Maybe next time, don’t cheat on your taxes. Or lie to your wife.”
My throat went dry.
Nessa grabbed my phone and stared at the message. “Is this a threat? What are they talking about?”
I couldn’t answer right away.
Because the last part… wasn’t entirely wrong. There was something I hadn’t told her. About six months ago, I took a freelance job under the table.
I didn’t report it. I didn’t think anyone would find out—just a few thousand dollars to cover some credit card debt. I was too embarrassed to tell Nessa.
The job had involved helping a startup fix their data systems. I logged into a few things remotely from our apartment. Nothing shady, but… if someone was watching, they could’ve seen a lot more than I realized.
That realization hit me hard. If someone was recording us—had been—they might’ve seen those work sessions. Maybe even gotten access to my emails.
It was far-fetched, but not impossible. I looked over at Nessa. She was pale, her jaw tense.
Not angry—yet—but scared. “Why would they say that?” she pressed. “What are they trying to do?”
I shook my head.
“I don’t know. But I need to talk to someone. I might know a guy.”
That night, I reached out to a former coworker—Desmond, an IT security contractor I used to work with.
He lived in Boston, about four hours south, and I trusted him. He was the kind of guy who didn’t ask too many questions but always had answers. We drove down that same night and crashed at his place.
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