The Red Light In The Bathroom

I was renting an apartment. One night, while I was showering, I noticed a bright red blinking light in the upper corner of the bathroom. Panicked, I wrapped myself in a towel and left immediately.

At 4 a.m., the owner called me, screaming angrily: “Are you out of your mind?! This is a…” The call cut off. A second later, the phone rang again, but I didn’t answer. I was still sitting in my car, barefoot, shaking, staring at the building like it might catch fire.

I didn’t know what the red light was, but my gut screamed it wasn’t right. I had only moved in a week ago, and everything already felt…off. There was no peephole on the door. The windows had nails in them, so they only opened halfway. But the place was cheap, clean, and I was desperate. So I ignored the weirdness—until that light blinked at me like it was watching.

The next morning, after a long night in my car, I returned with my friend Radu. He used to work in security installations and knew his way around electronics. We entered the bathroom and he spotted it right away.

“It’s a micro-camera,” he whispered, reaching up with a broomstick and knocking it loose. “This isn’t legal. At all.”

I felt sick. Someone had been watching me. Showering. Changing. Everything.

I packed my things within the hour.

The landlord tried calling again, but I ignored it. I went straight to the police. To my surprise, they took it seriously. The officer asked for the camera, the lease, and told me I had done the right thing. Apparently, there were a few similar complaints around the neighborhood, all from women who had rented small apartments short-term. Nothing had been proven—until now.

Two days later, I was staying with my cousin while I looked for a new place. I was still rattled. Every time I closed the bathroom door, I looked for blinking lights. I kept my towel on longer than usual. And I felt gross, like I’d been invaded.

Then the landlord finally sent a text.

“You don’t know what you’ve done. You’ve ruined me.”

I didn’t reply. I screenshotted it and gave it to the officer handling the case. He raised an eyebrow and nodded. “Looks like this might go deeper than we thought.”

Weeks passed. I found a better apartment, a little more expensive, but quiet and sunny. I was trying to move on. Then one afternoon, I got a message on Facebook from a girl named Andra.

“Hey, I think we’ve both rented from the same guy. Did you also find a camera?”

I felt the air leave my lungs. She had short, curly hair in her profile picture and a kind smile. We agreed to meet at a café that weekend.

Andra was sharp. She worked in marketing and had rented from him three months earlier. She had felt watched too, but never saw a camera. After a week, he told her there were “plumbing issues” and made her leave. She lost her deposit and didn’t ask questions—until she saw a post online from another girl who’d found something strange behind her mirror.

“So I searched his name,” Andra said, sipping her coffee. “But there was nothing online. No reviews. Nothing. Too clean.”

We kept talking. More people messaged us after we posted anonymously on a local forum. In total, we found six women who’d stayed in his properties and felt something wasn’t right.

We started a group chat. Shared details. Floor plans. Photos. Turns out, the camera was always hidden in the same spot—upper bathroom corners or behind air vents. The police began to build a case. We were told not to post more, not to confront him, and not to mention anything publicly. So we stayed quiet.

But I wasn’t okay. Every time I walked past someone with a phone in their hand, I felt watched. Every sound in my apartment made me flinch. I started sleeping with the bathroom door closed and a chair wedged against it. It wasn’t rational, but trauma doesn’t always follow reason.

Andra texted one night:

“I can’t stop thinking about how many others might not know. That their lives are being watched.”

That hit me. I couldn’t just move on and pretend it didn’t happen. Not while it might be happening to someone else.

Three months into the investigation, the police told us they were preparing a search warrant for his properties. They had enough evidence, they said.

And that’s when things turned.

The landlord disappeared.

No one could find him. His phone was off. His main apartment was empty. Neighbors hadn’t seen him in weeks. The case stalled.

Then a strange thing happened.

I received an envelope in my mailbox. No return address. Inside, there was a USB stick and a single note:

“You were never supposed to see that.”

I felt cold all over. I didn’t plug in the USB at home. I went to the police station. They plugged it into a secure device.

The USB had hours of footage—showers, bedrooms, women changing, sleeping. Me. And others. Each video labeled by date and apartment. It was sickening.

But it was also the proof they needed.

Two weeks later, he was found in a small village near the mountains, hiding at a relative’s house. He was arrested on the spot.

That day, I cried. Not because he was caught—but because it was finally over. I could breathe again.

The news ran the story. “Landlord Caught Filming Tenants With Hidden Cameras.” More women came forward. Some didn’t want to press charges, others broke down in court. But something powerful happened—we formed a small community. We talked. We healed.

Andra and I stayed close. One day, over drinks, she said, “Do you realize what we did?”

I shook my head.

“We stopped him. And maybe we helped people we’ll never meet.”

I smiled. She was right.

Fast forward a year later. I was at a seminar about digital safety, invited as a guest speaker. I shared my story—not as a victim, but as someone who had learned to fight back.

At the end, a young woman approached me. Her hands trembled.

“I saw your story,” she said. “I thought I was crazy for feeling watched in my old apartment. But now I know I’m not alone.”

That moment meant everything.

The twist came a few months later. I received a letter from the landlord. It had been sent through his lawyer.

“You ruined my life,” it read. “But maybe I deserved it. I started recording as a joke, but then it got worse. I couldn’t stop. I lost everything. I think I needed someone to catch me. So thank you.”

I stared at the letter for a long time. I didn’t know how to feel.

But a part of me believed it. Some people spiral in silence. They don’t know how to ask for help. That doesn’t excuse them, but it explains the brokenness.

Still, I never replied. He had his path to walk now—and I had mine.

Life eventually settled. I started working with an NGO that educates people about digital safety, especially women renting alone. We built guides, held workshops, and made short videos teaching people how to check for hidden devices.

Andra and I even co-wrote an article that went viral: “The Red Light in the Bathroom: How We Fought Back.”

We didn’t write it for fame. We wrote it for the girl who’s moving into her first apartment, who thinks she’s being paranoid. We wrote it so she knows she’s not alone—and that her instincts matter.

The biggest lesson I learned?

Trust your gut. Always.

If something feels off, it probably is.

And speak up—even if your voice shakes. Because silence protects no one. Not you. Not the next girl.

To anyone out there who’s been through something similar: you’re not crazy. You’re not dramatic. You’re brave. And you deserve safety and peace in your own home.

If this story meant something to you—share it. You never know who might need to hear it. And if you’ve ever trusted your instincts and it changed your life, leave a like. You’re stronger than you think.