ACT 1 — THE COMPOUND
When I moved into that compound, I told myself I had finally found peace. The room was small, yes, but it was mine. One bed, one bag, one plastic chair, and enough quiet to type my stories at night.
The rent was manageable, and in that part of town, manageable rent was almost a miracle. The walls were old, the paint had faded, and the passage smelled of dust after every dry afternoon, but nobody troubled me.

Mr Tunde, the landlord, acted like a quiet man. He did not laugh loudly or quarrel with tenants in the open. He collected rent, gave short greetings, and moved around the compound as if every stone answered to him.
The compound had one real problem. All tenants used just one toilet and bathroom area at the back. It was not comfortable, but I had lived in worse places before, so I refused to complain.
For the first two days, nothing happened. I learned the rhythm of the place. Women fetched water early. Children ran errands. Buckets scraped the concrete. By evening, everyone retreated into rooms and radios murmured behind thin walls.
The bathroom had one thing I noticed but did not question. A red towel always hung on the same nail near the back wall. Somebody told me it belonged to Mr Tunde, and that was enough explanation for me.
ACT 2 — THE FIRST TOUCH
On the third morning, I was rushing somewhere. I carried my bucket of water to the bathroom and tried to bathe quickly. The air inside was damp and sour with old soap. The floor chilled my feet.
I poured water over myself and moved fast, thinking only about time. Then I felt fingers behind me. At first, it was light enough for my mind to reject it. Then the touch moved, deliberate and real.
I spun around immediately. Water ran down my face. My heart struck my ribs so hard I could hear it. But nobody stood behind me. Nobody crouched near the door. Nobody breathed by the window.
Only the red towel hung there.
I stared at it until my eyes hurt. Its corner rested against the wall, soaked at the bottom, though I could not remember splashing it. I told myself fear was making shapes out of nothing.
“Maybe it’s just my imagination,” I whispered, because saying it aloud made it feel less dangerous. Then I rinsed off, dressed, and left without telling a single person what had happened.
That silence became my first mistake.
That evening, I was inside my room typing when a feminine scream tore through the compound. I paused, irritated at first, because noise was common there. Then the scream came again after two seconds, louder and broken.
I ran outside with the others. People had gathered near the passage, all asking questions nobody could answer. Then Chizaram appeared from the bathroom, tying a white towel around herself, shaking so badly she could barely stand.
“He touched me! My body! He was touching me!” she cried.
Chizaram lived in room number four. She was not dramatic. She greeted politely, kept her room clean, and minded her business. Seeing her like that made the whole compound colder than the morning bathroom floor.
ACT 3 — CHIZARAM’S WARNING
Questions flew everywhere. Who touched you? What happened? Did you see his face? Was the door open? Chizaram could barely breathe enough to answer, but when she did, my stomach dropped.
She said she had been bathing inside the bathroom when she felt a hand touching her. She had opened her eyes at once. But there was nobody there. Nothing moved. Nobody entered. Nobody left.
The neighbours shouted in confusion. Some accused fear. Some muttered about spirits. One woman crossed herself. Another stared toward Mr Tunde’s rooms, then quickly looked away as if her own eyes had betrayed her.
I stood among them, the only guy there except for Mr Tunde, who was not present. My own story rose into my throat, hot and heavy. I should have spoken. I should have supported her.
Instead, I swallowed it.
Read More
My silence was not courage. It was shame mixed with fear. I thought if I admitted it happened to me too, people would laugh, or worse, they would look at me as if I was part of it.
So Chizaram stood alone in the middle of the compound, dripping water, trembling, while the rest of us stared. The red towel remained inside that bathroom like a witness that refused to speak.
That night, I could not sleep. Every small sound became a footstep. Every scrape outside my door became breathing. I remembered the damp edge of the towel, and the way it had seemed heavier after I turned around.
Very early the next morning, I decided to prove the matter to myself. I carried my bucket of water and soap to the bathroom. Before bathing, I locked the door carefully. Then I locked the small window too.
No one could enter.
I poured water on my body, rubbed soap over my face, and kept my eyes shut. The room was silent except for water dripping somewhere behind the wall. I told myself the silence was proof.
Then I felt breath on my shoulder.
It was gentle, warm, and close enough to raise every hair on my skin. Before I could turn, fingers touched my left hand. Not imagination. Not air. A real touch, pressing against wet skin.
I screamed. Soap entered my eyes. Fire burned through my lashes. I staggered backward, one hand searching for the locked door while neighbours began shouting outside.
When I forced my eyes open, something small lay beneath the red towel.
It was a key.
The key was old, tied with red thread, and scratched on one side with the number 4. I knew that number before anybody said it. Chizaram’s room was room number four.
ACT 4 — THE WALL BEHIND THE TOWEL
By the time I opened the door, people had gathered. Chizaram pushed through first. She saw the key on the wet floor and immediately stepped back as though it had bitten her.
“No,” she whispered. “I saw that thing before.”
Before we could ask where, the red towel shifted. Not much. Just enough for everyone close to the doorway to see the dark line behind it. It was not a crack. It was a narrow wooden panel.
Someone pulled the towel down.
The whole compound went silent.
Behind the towel was a hidden opening, covered from inside by a loose board painted the same dull color as the bathroom wall. It was narrow, but not random. It led toward the back passage beside Mr Tunde’s private store.
A long rubber glove hung from a hook inside the opening. Beside it were damp cloths, a bent wire, and two more small keys tied with red thread. One had a mark that looked like a 2. Another had no number.
Nobody spoke for several seconds. The discovery was too ugly to enter the air all at once. Then Chizaram covered her mouth and began crying. The woman beside her held her, but even that woman’s hands shook.
Mr Tunde arrived from the back passage wearing the calm face he always wore. But calm could not save him from the red towel on the floor, the open panel, the glove, and the numbered key lying between us.
“What is going on here?” he asked.
For the first time since I moved into the compound, nobody answered him like a landlord. Nobody lowered their voice. Nobody shifted aside for him to pass. The silence that had protected him turned against him.
The man with the bucket pointed at the opening. “Explain this.”
Mr Tunde looked at the wall, then at Chizaram, then at me. His mouth moved once before sound came out. He said it was old plumbing access. He said tenants were overreacting. He said the key was nothing.
But Chizaram finally found her voice.
She told us she had seen red thread on the floor near her door days before. She had ignored it because she thought it came from someone’s cloth. Now the number 4 on the key made her knees weaken.
Someone called the police. Another neighbour took pictures before anything could be moved. Mr Tunde tried to shout then, but shouting came too late. Everybody had already seen what the red towel had hidden.
ACT 5 — WHAT THE RED TOWEL TAUGHT US
When the police arrived, the back store was opened. The other side of the hidden panel was there, exactly where the passage met Mr Tunde’s private space. The board had been made to slide without making much noise.
The police collected the glove, the keys, and the cloths. They asked each tenant to give a statement. Chizaram cried through hers. I gave mine with my hands locked together, ashamed of the day I stayed quiet.
Mr Tunde kept insisting he was innocent. He said the bathroom was old. He said tenants wanted to destroy his name. But every explanation became weaker when placed beside the opening, the key, and the towel.
The red towel was not just hanging there. It was waiting.
That sentence stayed with me because it was the truth I had felt before I had proof. Sometimes danger does not enter through the door. Sometimes it is already built into the wall, disguised as something ordinary.
The compound changed after that. Some tenants left within weeks. Chizaram moved first, with help from her elder brother. I left not long after. No cheap rent was worth sleeping beside that kind of memory.
Before leaving, I apologized to Chizaram. I told her I should have spoken when she screamed. She looked at me for a long time, then said softly, “Next time, don’t let fear make another person stand alone.”
I have never forgotten that.
People like Mr Tunde survive on silence. They rely on shame, confusion, and the hope that victims will question themselves before questioning the room. They hide behind respect, age, ownership, and ordinary objects.
For us, the object was a red towel.
For somebody else, it may be a locked door, a family secret, a smiling elder, or a warning everyone keeps ignoring because speaking first feels too frightening.
But the body knows when something is wrong.
Mine knew on the third morning. Chizaram’s knew that evening. By the next day, the whole compound knew too. And once the towel came down, nothing Mr Tunde said could put it back on the wall.