He thanked us for “bringing attention to a compromised surveillance post.” According to him, the rental had been under observation for months. A man suspected of trafficking girls used short-term rentals to move victims. The blinking meant the feed was live. When I removed the camera, they lost visual coverage. Within an hour, someone returned to the house, saw it empty, and left.
“You likely forced him to abort a move,” Mistry said. “Which may have saved someone. But it also tipped him off.”
Something hot rose in my chest. If this was real, why were civilians sleeping there? Why no warning? Why was a listing advertised as a cozy suburban stay doubling as a federal trap?
“Are we in trouble?” I asked.
“Not criminally,” he said. “But stay quiet.”
We did. For about a week.
Then the messages started. A blank Instagram account sent, “You shouldn’t have touched the camera.” A voicemail came through with my name distorted by a cheap filter: “People get curious. People get hurt.”
We went to the local police. The officer shrugged. “Probably trolls. You didn’t post anything else, right?”
We hadn’t. But Pilar’s cousin had. Tomas, twenty-three and allergic to consequences, posted a TikTok: a jokey walkthrough titled “POV your Airbnb is haunted or bugged 😂😂😂.” In the background, blink-blink-blink. It racked up hundreds of thousands of views overnight.
The threats escalated. Camera emojis. Our street name. Two nights later, Pilar’s car was keyed in deep, deliberate lines. The responding officer said it could be random vandalism. Nothing felt random anymore.
Pilar wanted to leave town. We drove to her sister’s place. I told myself we were decompressing, but something kept gnawing at me. If this was an official operation, why was the listing still live?
I checked from a burner account. Same photos. Same price. Same description. A new review read: “Nice place. Strange noises at night.”
I booked it.
Pilar called me reckless. She was right. I went anyway.
The house looked identical. Fresh screws on the smoke detector. No blinking. I sat on the couch and waited. At 2 a.m., footsteps crossed the back porch. A knock at the sliding glass door. A man in a hoodie and cap stood there, not trying the handle, not knocking again. He waited. Then he turned and disappeared into the trees.
I didn’t sleep. At dawn, I drove to a different police precinct. Different town. Different faces. Detective Ko listened without interrupting. She asked for names, timelines, screenshots. She didn’t minimize anything.
A week later, they raided the house.
They found cameras. Not police equipment. Cameras hidden in vents, clocks, a second smoke detector I hadn’t noticed. The supposed federal asset didn’t exist. No contracts. No agent named Darren Mistry. The sting was a lie.
The host’s real name was Faraz Rehmani. He had been livestreaming guests and selling access through encrypted sites. The threats were part of the system: confuse people, scare them quiet, buy time to erase evidence.
The platform released a statement about being “deeply disturbed.” They refunded our stay. They added a coupon, as if a discount could patch a hole like that. We hired a lawyer. We sued. We won enough to buy a small, tired house and replace every smoke detector with ones I installed myself, offline and dumb as rocks.
We don’t use short-term rentals anymore. Hotels aren’t perfect, but they have hallways, staff, and cameras that don’t pretend to be smoke detectors. Pilar started volunteering, helping people learn how to spot hidden lenses and what to do when platforms try to gaslight them into silence.
Tomas deleted his TikTok and now shows up with pies instead of apologies.
I still think about that blinking light. How easy it was to ignore. How trained we are to dismiss discomfort as imagination. Sometimes danger doesn’t announce itself with sirens. Sometimes it just blinks, patiently, waiting for you to look away.
