"Shake the sample with a few drops of D2O" is the oft-suggested strategy to reveal the presence of an exchangeable proton in a 1H NMR spectrum. However, in the present example the potentially-exchangeable proton may be buried under other proton absorption signals and, thus, hidden from view.
So, the question now becomes: How do you know whether or not there is a squirrel clinging to the wrong side of a tree?
The presence or absence of an exchangeable proton (the "squirrel") can be detected by integrating the NMR spectrum before and after D2O exchange.
In the case of exchangeable H's attached to nitrogen, quadrupole broadening of the proton NMR signal due to the attached 14N nucleus can be so extensive that the absorption signal becomes barely detectable as a gentle "swelling" above baseline. Nevertheless, spectral integration will reveal the presence of this squirrel, too.