My wife was the first to notice it.
“Why is that blinking like that?” she asked, pointing up at the smoke detector on the ceiling of our Airbnb bedroom.
I shrugged at first. “Probably low battery.”
But the light wasn’t the slow, lazy blink I was used to seeing. It was faster. Almost… deliberate.
Something about it made my stomach tighten.
I dragged a chair under it and unscrewed the cover. The moment it came loose, my pulse spiked.
Inside wasn’t just wiring.
There was a tiny lens.
A camera.
For a second, neither of us spoke. Then my wife grabbed her bag.
“Pack. Now.”
We didn’t argue. We didn’t even finish zipping everything properly. Within minutes, we were in the car, doors locked, breathing hard like we’d just escaped something worse than we could name.
At the first gas station we stopped at, I pulled out my phone and wrote the review.
I didn’t hold back.
“Hidden camera in the smoke detector. We left immediately. This place is unsafe. Avoid at all costs.”
I hit post.
A few minutes later, my phone buzzed.
A reply.
From the host.
“You fool, this is—”
I stared at the message, heart pounding, expecting denial, threats… anything.
Then the rest loaded.
“—a test unit. It’s not even connected. That detector was removed from service months ago.”
I blinked.
“What?” my wife said, leaning closer.
I read it again. Then again.
“It’s… not active?” I said slowly.
She frowned. “That doesn’t make it okay.”
And she was right.
I typed back.
“Then why was it still installed in a guest room?”
There was a pause before the response came.
“It shouldn’t have been. That’s on me.”
Something about the tone had shifted. Less defensive. More… uneasy.
The next morning, I got another message.
This time from Airbnb support.
They’d investigated overnight.
The listing had been taken down. Permanently.
Turns out, the “test unit” excuse didn’t hold up. There were reports from previous guests—similar concerns, ignored or dismissed. Mine had just been the one that pushed it over the edge.
A few days later, we received a full refund.
But more than that, I got a final email.
“Thank you for reporting this. Your review helped prevent future guests from being put at risk.”
I looked at my wife.
“We did the right thing,” I said.
She nodded, squeezing my hand.
That blinking light had seemed small.
Easy to ignore.
But sometimes, it’s the smallest warning signs that matter most.
And this time—we listened.