STORY TIME BY NWA

STORY TIME BY NWA African storyteller

True African stories inspired by real life.
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Love, secrets, fear & consequences.

📖 Dark tales • Real-life drama • Moral lessons

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The elders have found out the truth…Mama Ezinne killed her own kinsmen.Now the village must decide her fate.What should ...
19/04/2026

The elders have found out the truth…
Mama Ezinne killed her own kinsmen.

Now the village must decide her fate.

What should be done to her? 👇

“Widow’s Rice” FINAL part drops tomorrow 🔥

19/04/2026

Bisi small pepper vs Mama Benji 😂🤣

Big shout out to my new rising fans!Issa Coulibaly, Ogu Vivian, Linda Love Ramabalelinda
18/04/2026

Big shout out to my new rising fans!

Issa Coulibaly, Ogu Vivian, Linda Love Ramabalelinda

18/04/2026

Widow’s Rice Part 7🔥

There’s always that one neighbour that won’t mind their business…Is she a neighbour… or a problem you can’t escape? 🤨New...
17/04/2026

There’s always that one neighbour that won’t mind their business…

Is she a neighbour… or a problem you can’t escape? 🤨

New story loading 👀

17/04/2026

Don’t judge too fast…

But what vibe is Mama Benji giving you? 🤨

A. Wahala
B. Mystery
C. Danger
D. I need to mind my business 😭

Big shout out to my newest top fans! 💎Morenike Pedro, Chibende Anamachi Favour, Hawad Khalfan, Uche Precious Diana, Amar...
16/04/2026

Big shout out to my newest top fans! 💎

Morenike Pedro, Chibende Anamachi Favour, Hawad Khalfan, Uche Precious Diana, Amarachi Cyprian, Kelebogile Muswadzi, Masenga Ng'onya, Atinakpa Naomi Prudence, Ma Ma, Chinenye Jennifer

Drop a comment to welcome them to our community, fans

Her blood ran cold. Nobody in Lagos knew that name. Her aunt had told her to drop it when she came to the city. “Answer ...
16/04/2026

Her blood ran cold. Nobody in Lagos knew that name. Her aunt had told her to drop it when she came to the city. “Answer only Adanna here,” she had said. “Don’t confuse them.”

But the voice called again, gentle but firm.
“Chiamaka… open.”

Her torch shook in her hand. She staggered back, her breath caught in her throat.

Behind her, the corridor stretched like a throat swallowing her. The photos on the wall—Madam in lace, Dara with her birthday cake, the man in a navy suit—looked sharper, almost alive.

And then another voice rang out, sharp and real.

“Adanna?”

She spun around, her heart leaping.

Dara stood there barefoot, the blue light of her phone glowing on her face, making her look pale and strange.

“What are you doing here?” Dara asked, her voice low but sharp.

Adanna swallowed hard. “I… I heard something,” she whispered, pointing weakly toward the red door.

For one quick second, fear flashed in Dara’s eyes. Her face changed, but almost at once she covered it, hissing. “Go back to your room. Now. And don’t ever come near this corridor again.”

She turned and walked away, the glow of her phone bouncing as she disappeared into her room.

Adanna stood frozen, her torch slipping in her sweaty palm.

The red door loomed behind her, silent but alive.

And then the whisper came again, soft and pleading.
“Chiamaka… don’t leave me.”

The morning came too quickly, and Adanna dragged herself out of bed with swollen eyes. The house looked normal again under the sunlight, but her heart still carried the weight of the night. She tried to convince herself it had only been a dream, yet the sound of that laugh, the counting, and the whisper calling her real name would not leave her mind.

She picked up her broom and began to sweep the compound slowly, her arms moving but her thoughts far away. The wet sand stuck to the broom, and the early air was heavy with the smell of rain. As she worked, the gate creaked open and Baba Kazeem, the old gateman, walked in with his limp step and tired eyes. He stopped near her and watched her sweep.

“You are new here,” he said in a low, steady voice that made Adanna’s hand tighten on the broom. “Keep your head down and do only what you are told. This house has rules that are not written on paper.”

Adanna looked up quickly. “What do you mean?” she asked in a whisper.

But Baba Kazeem only shook his head, adjusted his cap, and walked away to the small gatehouse. He did not answer, and that silence frightened her more than words could.

She tried to push his warning from her mind, but it stayed, heavy and strange.

Inside, Madam was seated in the living room, her gele tall, her wrapper neat, a small cup of tea steaming on the glass table. Her eyes followed Adanna like a hawk as she walked in. “Adanna,” Madam said smoothly, “bring me honey from the cupboard.”

Adanna hurried to the kitchen and returned with the jar, placing it carefully on the table. Madam stirred her tea slowly, her gaze never leaving Adanna’s face. “You look tired,” she said softly. “Did you sleep well?”

Adanna nodded quickly. “Yes, ma.”

Madam gave a slow smile, but her tone turned cold. “Good. A maid must sleep well if she wants to work well. But remember—don’t go where you are not sent.”

The words made Adanna’s chest tighten. It was as if Madam had seen her near the red door the night before. She lowered her eyes and whispered, “Yes, ma.”

Later that afternoon, Dara’s voice echoed from upstairs. “Adanna! Come here quickly!”

Adanna climbed the stairs, her hands sweating as she carried a polish box. Dara’s room was painted bright pink, with posters on the walls and clothes thrown everywhere. On the table, her phone lay open. Adanna bent to polish the sneakers on the floor, but her eyes accidentally caught the screen.

Her heart almost stopped.

The gallery was open, filled with short clips. Each clip showed her—Adanna sweeping, Adanna ironing, Adanna washing her face when she thought no one was looking. Dara had been recording her secretly, laughing at her behind her back.

Adanna’s chest burned with shame. She forced her eyes away, polished the shoes quickly, and left before Dara noticed.

Evening came. Madam stood in the hallway mirror adjusting her earrings, her perfume filling the house with a heavy, sweet smell. “I will be back late,” she said, her eyes fixed on her reflection. “Cook ogbono soup for Dara.” She turned slightly and looked at Adanna, her gaze sharp and cutting. “And remember my rules. Especially number six.”

Adanna’s breath caught. She bowed her head. “Yes, ma.”

The hours dragged slowly. Adanna cooked, cleaned, and served Dara, who complained about the soup being “too thick.” When she finally lay on her mattress that night, her whole body was aching. She closed her eyes, praying for sleep to take her quickly.

But then it came again.

The laugh.

She sat up sharply, her heart pounding. The same laugh as the night before. Soft, playful, too young to belong to Dara.

Then came the counting, the small voice rising through the silence of the house.
“One… two… three…”

To be continued....
written by STORY TIME BY NWA

The Forbidden Room Episode 2 🔥

But Uche’s burial had barely ended when another tragedy struck.Two days later, word spread again through Umuaka.This tim...
14/04/2026

But Uche’s burial had barely ended when another tragedy struck.

Two days later, word spread again through Umuaka.

This time it was Chika and Nnanna, two of Okeke’s kinsmen.

They had gone together to cut wood near the edge of the forest.

According to the men who were with them, the accident happened suddenly.

The branch of a large iroko tree snapped.

Before anyone could shout a warning, it came crashing down.

By the time the other men pulled the heavy branch aside…

Both men were already dead.

The news shook the village.

Three deaths in the same family within a few days.

Women whispered nervously as they returned from the stream.

Men gathered under the mango tree to discuss what was happening.

“This week is strange,” one man said quietly.

“First Uche.”

“Now these two.”

Another man shook his head.

“All of them were strong men.”

A younger man spoke.

“Maybe it is simply bad luck.”

But one of the older men leaned forward slowly.

“When deaths begin to follow each other like this…”

“…it is wise for the village to consult the oracle.”

A few men nodded uneasily.

“Yes.”

“Let the dibia look into it.”

But another man laughed dismissively.

“Oracle for what?”

“Uche died from sickness.”

“These two died because a tree fell.”

“Are trees now killing people because of spirits?”

A few men chuckled.

But not everyone was comfortable.

The elder who suggested the oracle looked toward the distance.

Then he said quietly,

“Sometimes what looks ordinary… is not ordinary at all.”

The laughter faded.

No one spoke for a moment.

The wind moved softly through the mango tree above them.

That evening, the village slowly grew quiet again.

At the edge of Umuaka, smoke rose from Mama Ezinne’s compound.

The widow sat beside her cooking fire.

The flames flickered in the dark.

For a long time she simply watched them.

Then she picked up a stick and stirred the burning wood.

The fire crackled softly.

Mama Ezinne leaned closer.

And whispered,

“Three.”

The fourth death came in a way no one could explain.

It happened at night.

Just before dawn, a young boy ran through the village shouting.

“Come quickly!”

“Something has happened to Obinna!”

People rushed toward the compound.

When they arrived, they found the man lying outside his hut.

His body stiff.

His eyes wide open.

As if he had seen something terrible before he died.

His wife knelt beside him crying.

“He woke up in the night!”

“He said someone was calling him outside!”

“But when I followed him…”

Her voice trembled.

“He was already on the ground.”

An elder crouched beside the body.

He studied the man’s face.

Then slowly shook his head.

“This is not ordinary.”

By afternoon, the whole village was restless.

Four deaths.

All from the same extended family.

And all within a short time.

Men gathered again beneath the mango tree.

This time the discussion was tense.

“This cannot be coincidence anymore,” one man said.

Another nodded.

“First Uche.”

“Then Chika and Nnanna.”

“Now Obinna.”

An elder spoke firmly.

“We should have listened earlier.”

“We must consult the oracle.”

No one argued this time.

Somewhere in the shadow, the widow lurk.....

To be continued...
Written by STORY TIME BY NWA
Widow's Rice episode 5🔥

12/04/2026

Widow's Rice Part 6🔥

“Adanna pressed her ear against the red door, her body trembling. From inside came the sound of a child laughing—soft, p...
11/04/2026

“Adanna pressed her ear against the red door, her body trembling. From inside came the sound of a child laughing—soft, playful, but not human. Then the whisper followed, clear and cold, calling her real name… a name nobody in Lagos knew. Her knees buckled as dozens of glowing eyes opened in the darkness, and thin hands began to push against the door, desperate to get out. She tried to scream but her voice caught in her throat. And in that moment, Adanna realized her madam had been hiding something far worse than cruelty…”

2 hours earlier....

The rain fell all night and the house was quiet. The generator had gone off, and only the sound of the clock ticked in the silence. Adanna lay awake on her thin mattress, staring at the cracked ceiling. She was tired, her back ached from scrubbing floors, and her hands were sore from washing clothes, but sleep refused to come.

She turned to the wall where she had taped her mother’s photo. It was a small, faded picture, showing her mother smiling with a basket of akara on her head. That smile gave Adanna strength. She touched the picture gently and whispered, “I will endure, Mama, I will endure.”

She closed her eyes, but that was when she heard it.

A laugh.

Her eyes flew open at once. It was not loud, but it was clear, soft, and playful, the laugh of a little child.

Adanna sat up slowly. Her body felt cold, though the night was warm. Madam Bisi had only one child, Dara, and Dara was seventeen. Everyone in Kareem Street knew that. The sound she had just heard did not belong to Dara.

She held her breath and listened again. The laugh came a second time, this time followed by the sound of tiny feet running across the wooden floor above her.

Adanna’s hands shook. She remembered Madam’s warning on her first day.

Sweep the compound before six in the morning.
Don’t touch the big fridge unless told.
Don’t open the gate after nine at night.
Don’t go upstairs when Madam is not at home.
Don’t walk in the last corridor on the right.
And never, ever touch the red door.

Madam’s eyes had been sharp when she gave that last rule. Her voice had been cold when she said, “If you value your life, don’t touch that door.”

The red door.

Adanna had seen it once when she went to hang laundry upstairs. It stood at the very end of the last corridor, painted deep red, thick and glossy, like it was hiding something. She had always avoided it, but tonight, the laugh from behind it would not leave her mind.

Her fingers reached for the small torchlight beside her pillow. She picked it up, tied her scarf tighter, and slipped into her slippers. Her legs moved before her thoughts agreed, carrying her into the hallway.

The air inside the house felt different at night. The smell of polish and camphor hung thick. The shadows from the furniture stretched long, bending across the walls like they were alive. The floor creaked softly under her feet, each sound making her heart beat faster.

Step by step, she climbed the staircase. The torchlight shook in her hand. Her breath came fast and shallow.

At the top, the corridor stretched ahead, narrow and dark. And there at the very end stood the red door.

Her chest rose and fell as she took another step forward.

Then she heard it.

A child’s voice. Small, soft, steady. Counting numbers.
“One… two… three…”

Her knees weakened. She pressed her back against the wall, bending slowly to peep through the small gap under the door.

A faint light glowed inside. A shadow passed across it, small like the body of a child.

Her hand rose slowly, trembling, until her fingers touched the cold metal handle.

And then she froze.

A whisper came from inside. Clear. Familiar.

“Chiamaka…”

To be continued ....

Written by STORY TIME BY NWA

The Forbidden Room Episode 1 🔥

Uche grinned.“Of course.”He turned and walked back toward the mango tree.“Make space!” he called to the others.“I have b...
11/04/2026

Uche grinned.

“Of course.”

He turned and walked back toward the mango tree.

“Make space!” he called to the others.

“I have brought the widow’s famous rice.”

The men laughed as he sat down.

One nudged him.

“You mocked the food earlier. Now look at you.”

Uche took a large mouthful.

“If the widow cooks like this every burial,” he said jokingly,

“we may start praying for more funerals.”

The men roared with laughter.

Across the compound, Mama Ezinne continued serving the next plate.

Her movements steady.

But her eyes drifted briefly toward the mango tree.

Just long enough to see Uche eating.

Then she turned back to the pot.

The funeral continued peacefully.

People ate and talked.

The drummers played softly in the background.

As evening approached, mourners slowly began leaving the compound.

Nothing unusual had happened.

Across the compound, Mama Ezinne continued serving the remaining rice.

Her face calm.

Her voice steady.

But when the last plate was served and the pot was nearly empty…

She lifted the lid once more.

Looked inside.

And whispered softly to herself.

“One.”

A loud cry shattered the quiet of Umuaka village just before sunrise.

“My husband! Somebody help me!”

Women heading toward the stream stopped walking.

Men preparing to leave for their farms turned toward the sound.

The cry was coming from Uche’s compound.

Before long, people began gathering outside the house.

“What happened?”

“Why is she shouting like that?”

Inside the compound, Uche’s wife sat on the ground beating her chest.

“My husband! My husband!”

Two women knelt beside her trying to hold her shoulders.

“What happened to him?” one asked gently.

The widow struggled to speak through her tears.

“He started complaining of stomach pain in the night.”

“He said something was burning inside him.”

“He began vomiting.”

“We thought it would pass.”

Her voice broke.

“But before morning…”

“He stopped breathing.”

A heavy silence fell over the compound.

One of the men standing nearby shook his head slowly.

“That man was strong.”

“I saw him only a few days ago.”

Another man nodded.

“Yes.”

“We were together at Pa Nwoke’s burial.”

“He was laughing and drinking palm wine.”

Someone else added quietly,

“And now he is gone.”

One of the elders sighed deeply.

“Death comes when it wishes.”

“Prepare for the burial.”

And so the village prepared another funeral.

But Uche’s burial had barely ended when another tragedy struck.

To be continued .......

Written by STORY TIME BY NWA
Widow's Rice Episode 4🔥

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