The Headless Shadow Under Our Shop Fan / Chapter 2: Under the Fan
The Headless Shadow Under Our Shop Fan

The Headless Shadow Under Our Shop Fan

Author: Brianna Ramirez


Chapter 2: Under the Fan

As he just finish, one man enter shop. Him face pale, eyes dull like person wey never sleep.

The bell for door no ring well, e just cough. The man clothes soak, but no be rain—e be like sweat. E wipe face with old handkerchief, nose pinch small, eyes red. Na stranger face, but e wear one brown jacket, shoe wey mud still dey chop.

My grandpapa smile, ask am, "Young man, wetin you wan chop?"

He open palm, show welcome, but I fit see say his smile stiff. He dey try hide him fear behind customer service.

The man look my grandpapa, smile small. "Uncle, you no go remember me. That year, trouble happen for this shop. I dey find pikin that time."

His smile crooked, like say the muscle for face dey pain am. Voice get one kind echo, as if e dey try remember how to talk normal.

My grandpapa freeze small, look the man well, then just laugh. "People dey plenty wey dey come this shop, I no fit remember everybody."

He shake head, scratch chin, eyes dey calculate the man. He fit remember, but e no wan talk too quick.

The man talk, "That year, I find pikin, even fight for here. Small thing remain, person for die."

He tap table gently, like say e dey try recall memory. His eye flash sharp for one second.

My grandpapa laugh, "Ehen, I remember now. That time your wife follow you come."

The laugh no reach him eye, but e try make the air light.

He come ask, "You find the pikin?"

He lean forward, voice soft, like say he dey pity the man.

The man smile, "Never see am, but I hear small news."

His smile short, quick, and he look down, as if the ground dey hide story.

My grandpapa nod, smile, talk, "News na better thing. You come alone?"

He adjust stool, try look outside to see if anybody follow the man.

The man answer, "No, my wife dey come behind me. She go soon reach. Uncle, give me two bowl of noodles and half bottle ogogoro. I hear say una ogogoro dey sweet—I wan try am today."

He drop the request like person wey dey test if shop dey work. Him hand steady, but him eye still dey roam, like say he dey find something lost.

My grandpapa look my grandma small, then nod—she sabi the sign. He stand up, pat his wrapper, then give the man one kind calculating look, just brief, as if he dey check the man for back.

He come tell my grandma, "Mama, abeg go bring ogogoro."

He lower him voice, make e sound like say na ordinary matter, but e eye dey talk another thing. For village, ogogoro na special drink, only elders dey taste am well.

My grandma nod, waka go backyard.

She carry lantern with her, wrapper sweep ground as she pass, leg dey quick—she no like to stay alone for this kind night.

My grandpapa smile, "Young man, find chair siddon. I dey go backyard go cook. Food go ready soon."

He motion the man to sit, then he himself waka go behind, pushing curtain with his left hand. I fit hear plate dey knock for backyard.

As he go, na only me and the man remain for shop.

The shop quiet small, only rain and fan noise dey compete. I shift my chair closer to counter, my heart dey beat anyhow.

The man look around, pick chair, siddon under the fan.

My heart squeeze, as if spirit dey press am. That seat never pure since that day.

Na that same spot my grandpapa second son dey when the thing happen.

My mind dey wander, remember how people gather that day, how the blood stain tile, and how mama cry pass market woman.

Because weather cold and everywhere dull, nobody on the fan.

Na so we dey like cold weather, use wrapper and hot tea, nobody dey find fan this kind night. But the thing still dey hang above, shadow dey dance for wall.

But the breeze wey dey enter dey push the fan small, e dey make noise.

E just dey swing small, make that "kuru kuru" sound wey dey put fear for person heart, like ghost dey play for ceiling.

The fan blade just dey shake, but e no dey turn.

The thing dey like old man wey dey cough for bed—just noise, no power.

The man look me, talk for one kind voice, "Small boy, on the fan. E dey hot me."

E voice sharp, but carry one kind undertone, like person wey dey vex for inside, but dey try hold am. Eye red, lips press together.

Him eye no soft, e be like say e dey vex, the thing make am look scary.

The way e take look me, I no fit match eye with am. My spirit just fly.

I just talk small, "But uncle, everywhere cold and rain dey fall. Why you wan on fan?"

My voice tiny, like fowl wey just hatch. Hand dey tremble as I hold counter.

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.

You may also like

Cursed by the Shadow That Knows My Name
Cursed by the Shadow That Knows My Name
4.9
Every time night falls, Ikenna’s family runs—never staying long, never speaking his name aloud, haunted by a faceless darkness that stole his twin and stalks them from village to city. When the black shadow returns, old wounds bleed and secrets threaten to break their silence: is Ikenna the next sacrifice, or the reason the curse hunts them? One wrong word, one forgotten rule, and the evil that took his brother will claim another soul before sunrise.
The Hidden Corpse in Apartment Seven
The Hidden Corpse in Apartment Seven
4.8
When Chuka’s friend tries to rent a cheap top-floor apartment, strange cries and swarms of flies hint at a deadly secret buried behind locked doors and hidden circuit breakers. The last tenant vanished, the NEPA bill is sky-high, and only one room stays icy cold—yet no one in the building knows the truth. Can Chuka uncover the corpse before the spirit drags another family into its nightmare?
We Sheltered the Spirit’s Daughter
We Sheltered the Spirit’s Daughter
4.7
When a mysterious family begs shelter on a cursed, stormy night, old secrets and vengeful spirits haunt every shadow in our village shop. My grandparents must choose between kindness and survival as midnight nears—and a spirit from the grave calls out for justice. If we trust the wrong soul, our bloodline may pay the price forever.
The Night Spirit Ate Our Goat Head
The Night Spirit Ate Our Goat Head
4.9
Timi faces his deepest childhood fears when a mysterious truck driver warns his family about a deadly spirit trapped in their attic. As secrets unravel and storm rages, Timi’s family must decide if they trust their own blood or the whispers of Okpoko’s haunted past—because one wrong move could cost them everything.
My Daughter’s Face in the Wall
My Daughter’s Face in the Wall
4.7
Seven years after his five-year-old daughter vanished without a trace, Sani’s world shatters again when her face appears in a water-stained wall photo. Haunted by grief and desperate for answers, he uncovers dark secrets about missing children and a madman’s warning that chills his soul. The truth he finds may be more terrifying than any ghost—because some wounds never heal, and some spirits refuse to rest.
Night Demon Inside My Estate
Night Demon Inside My Estate
5.0
Trapped in his Lagos flat, the narrator faces pure terror as a 'fake human' stalks the corridors, turning neighbors into monsters. Every moment is a fight between fear, suspicion, and desperate hope—because in this estate, evil wears a familiar face and nobody is truly safe.
Oga Madu Knocked At Midnight
Oga Madu Knocked At Midnight
4.9
Chijioke’s Christmas homecoming turns to terror when he and his uncle stray into the forbidden old bush—and see the legendary child-eater, Oga Madu, stalking them through the harmattan mist. Now, as pounding footsteps and a familiar voice demand entry, the family must decide: open the door and risk doom, or trust ancient warnings and watch loved ones beg to come inside. In a night where even blood can lie, who will survive when the monster wears your father’s face?
Married to the Palace Shadow
Married to the Palace Shadow
4.7
All my life, they called me the useless prince—the one born from a forgotten night and a mother no one rates. Now, the king forces me to marry the quiet, suffering cousin everyone calls the 'shadow princess.' But on our wedding night, I realize my gentle bride is hiding a razor-sharp mind and a secret that could shake the entire palace. In this house of betrayals, even peace can become deadly.
My Lover Was My Uncle’s Ghost
My Lover Was My Uncle’s Ghost
4.9
When a grieving shopkeeper befriends a mysterious woman by the river, his late uncle’s haunted guide dog tries to warn him of a deadly secret. Caught between family curses and forbidden love, he must choose: trust the living or heed the cries of the dead. One wrong step and he could lose everything—even his soul.
Chased by the Red Car’s Ghost
Chased by the Red Car’s Ghost
4.7
Lawal breaks every warning his master ever gave him when he picks up a terrified family on a haunted mountain road. As a bloodstained red sports car chases them, secrets unravel: a daughter who sees ghosts, a mother hiding the truth, and a dead girl’s spirit desperate for revenge. On this deadly Naija night, no one in the truck is truly who they claim to be—and dawn may never come for all of them.
Sold by My Dead Father’s Spirit
Sold by My Dead Father’s Spirit
4.8
After burying my papa, he sits up from the grave, hungry for food and trouble. Instead of peace, his wild spirit drags me from village to town, then sells me to a stranger—just like he sold my sister. Now, I must serve a harsh old teacher, hiding my dream to learn, while the truth about my real papa haunts me like midnight masquerade.
My Uncle’s Spirit Dey Hunt Me
My Uncle’s Spirit Dey Hunt Me
5.0
After surviving a bloody accident on Benue expressway, the main character faces an ancient village spirit haunting Makurdi General Hospital, forcing them to confront family secrets, betrayal, and the threat of a supernatural killer. As danger closes in, every prayer, every face, and every shadow could mean survival or death. If they fail, the spirit won’t just claim their life—it will claim their soul and everyone they love.