I never thought complaining about bass thumping through my walls would save lives.
Turns out it didâthree of them.
My name is Tyler. Iâm 36. I bought a duplex in Denver two years agoâleft side mine, right side rented to a guy named Victor. Mid-40s, quiet, kept to himself. Paid rent on time. We nodded hello, that was it.
Six months ago Victor got a new girlfriend, Carla. Then her two teenage kids started staying overâboy 16, girl 14.
Thatâs when the noise began.
Every night after 10 p.m., loud music. Heavy bass you could feel in your chest. Laughter. Doors slamming. Sometimes shouting.
I work from home as a software developer. Need sleep. Need quiet.
I left polite notes first. âHey man, could you keep it down after 10? Thanks!â
No change.
I knocked once. Victor opened the door, music blasting behind him. Smiled, said âSorry, kids being kids,â and turned it downâfor one night.
Then it got worse. Weekends started at noon. Weekdays until 2 a.m.
I lost it.
I started banging on the wall when it got loud. Left angry notes. âSome of us work!â Called the landlord twice. He talked to Victor, nothing changed.
We became enemies.
Victor put up a camera pointing at my driveway. I put up one pointing at his. He parked blocking my sidewalk. I left passive-aggressive voicemails for the landlord.
Carla started flipping me off when she saw me.
The kids smirked every time they walked past my window with the music cranked.
I hated them. They hated me.
Then came the night that changed everything.
Friday, November 8th. 1:30 a.m. Bass so loud my picture frames rattled.
I snapped.
I marched over in pajamas and slippers, pounded on his door like a maniac.
No answer.
Pounded harder.
Still nothing. But the music kept going.
I noticed the side gate was openâunusual for Victor, he always locked everything.
I walked around to the backyard, planning to yell through the window.
Thatâs when I heard it.
Not music.
Crying.
A girl sobbing. Muffled, but clear.
Coming from the basement window well.
The basement had those small horizontal windows at ground level.
I crouched down. Peered through the dirty glass.
What I saw made my blood freeze.
The teenage girlâCarlaâs daughter, Sofiaâwas chained to a pipe. Ankles shackled. Face bruised. Eyes swollen from crying.
Next to her, the boyâMateoâcurled in a corner, arms around his knees, rocking.
A single bare bulb lit the room. Concrete floor. Mattresses. Buckets for toilets.
They were being held prisoner.
In the house next door.
For months.
I backed away slowly. Heart pounding. Ran home. Called 911.
Police arrived in seven minutes.
They kicked in the door.
Victor and Carla were passed out upstairs, drunk and high.
The kids had been locked in the basement for four months.
Carlaâs ex-husband had custody. She kidnapped them back in July, hid them from authorities. Victor helped. Kept them quiet with threats and drugs.
The loud music wasnât parties.
It was to cover the crying.
The shouting I heard wasnât arguments.
It was discipline.
The camera on my driveway wasnât paranoia.
It was to watch if I got too nosy.
Police found drugs, weapons, chains, soundproofing foam on the basement walls.
Victor and Carla were arrested. Charged with kidnapping, child endangerment, false imprisonment, and more.
The kids are with their father now. Safe. In therapy.
I visited them once. Sofia hugged me and whispered, âThank you for knocking.â
The duplex is quiet now. Landlord sold Victorâs side. New tenants move in next month.
I still hear bass in my sleep sometimes. Wake up in a panic.
Police said if I hadnât complainedâif I hadnât banged on that door that nightâthe kids might never have been found.
Carlaâs ex had almost given up searching.
My petty feud saved them.
I was the asshole neighbor.
And Iâm glad I was.
Some fights arenât petty.
Sometimes the thing that annoys you most is the only thing loud enough to be heard over screams no one else notices.