La Senyera

La Senyera African stories: Official backup page of Ceo vibes
Posting African love stories & emotional tales ✨

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHTPart 6The scream from the village square tore through the quiet morning like a blade thr...
10/03/2026

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHT
Part 6
The scream from the village square tore through the quiet morning like a blade through cloth, sharp and terrified, the kind of cry that made even the birds scatter from the trees.
Amara and Obinna froze.
For a moment neither of them spoke, the silence between them heavy with the knowledge that whatever had begun beneath the house was no longer hidden.
Outside, hurried footsteps rushed past the compound, voices shouting over each other in confusion.
“Come and see!”
“Something is wrong!”
“The ground is opening!”
Obinna struggled to his feet, gripping the wall for support, his body still weak but his eyes suddenly alert, the fear in them deeper than before.
“You must not go there,” he said quickly, his voice rough but urgent, “whatever is happening in that square is not meant for ordinary eyes.”
Amara stared at him.
“Then why is it happening in the middle of the village?” she asked quietly.
Before Obinna could answer, the ground trembled again.
This time stronger.
Dust drifted down from the roof, the wooden walls creaking softly as if the entire house had suddenly grown old.
Amara felt the coral beads against her chest pulse again, faster now, almost impatient.
Then she heard it.
A sound carried faintly on the wind from the direction of the square.
Not shouting.
Not crying.
But chanting.
Low voices, many voices, repeating the same words again and again, the rhythm slow and ancient like a song remembered by the earth itself.
Obinna’s face went pale.
“No,” he whispered.
Amara’s heart tightened.
“You know that chant?”
Obinna nodded slowly, his breathing uneven.
“My grandfather once spoke of it,” he said, his voice barely louder than the wind outside, “he said if that chant is ever heard again in Umuaka, it means the thing beneath the village has opened its eyes.”
Amara felt a cold shiver crawl down her spine.
“The thing beneath the house?”
Obinna shook his head.
“No,” he said quietly.
“Beneath the village.”
At that moment another scream echoed through the air, louder than before, followed by a deep cracking sound like stone splitting under enormous pressure.
Both of them rushed to the doorway.
Across the rooftops they could see it now.
A thin column of dark smoke rising slowly from the direction of the square, twisting upward into the morning sky like a signal sent from the ground itself.
And somewhere inside that smoke, hidden from the eyes of the villagers gathering below, something enormous was beginning to move.
Something that had waited a very long time.
And now, finally—
It was waking up.
To be continued… 🔥

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHTPart 5Morning finally spread across Umuaka, soft golden light touching the mud houses an...
09/03/2026

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHT
Part 5

Morning finally spread across Umuaka, soft golden light touching the mud houses and narrow village paths, yet the warmth of the sun did nothing to chase away the strange uneasiness that had settled over the land.

Amara stood in the doorway of the house, the cool morning air brushing against her face, her eyes fixed on the cracked floor behind her where the earth had opened slightly during the night, thin smoke still curling slowly upward as though the ground itself was breathing.

Obinna remained on the floor, unmoving except for the faint rise and fall of his chest, his face pale, his body heavy like a man whose spirit had travelled somewhere far and had not yet found the strength to return.

From the distance came the quiet sounds of the village waking, women sweeping their compounds, children chasing each other between huts, goats bleating impatiently, yet something about the morning felt wrong, because every now and then someone would pause, glance toward the direction of the house, and quickly look away again as though their instincts warned them not to stare too long.

Amara’s fingers tightened around her coral beads.
The warmth had returned again.
Not burning, not painful, but alive.
She could feel a slow rhythm pulsing through them, a rhythm that matched the strange trembling still hidden deep beneath the earth.

Then Obinna groaned.
It was a weak sound, rough and dry, like someone waking from a nightmare too heavy to remember.
Amara turned quickly.
His fingers moved first, dragging faint lines across the dusty floorboards, then his eyelids fluttered slowly open.
For a moment his eyes were empty, unfocused, staring somewhere past the walls of the room as though he were still caught between two worlds.

Then suddenly he inhaled sharply.
And his gaze locked onto Amara.
Fear flashed across his face.
Not the fear of a man who had been attacked.
But the fear of someone who knew something far worse was coming.

“You must leave this house,” he whispered, his voice cracked and weak.
Amara did not move.
“Why?” she asked quietly.
Obinna struggled to push himself up, his body shaking as he leaned against the wall, sweat already forming along his forehead.

“Because the thing beneath this house,” he said slowly, his voice trembling with a terror that could not be hidden, “is waking up.”
Outside, a sudden scream echoed across the village.
It was sharp.
Panicked.
And it was coming from the direction of the village square.

Amara and Obinna both turned toward the open doorway.
The ground trembled again.
This time, the tremor travelled far beyond the house, spreading through the village like a warning.
And somewhere beneath the earth of Umuaka, something ancient shifted in the darkness, something that had slept for generations, something that had just felt the breaking of the covenant.
And it was hungry.

To be continued… 🔥

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHTPart 4Dawn did not arrive gently that morning in Umuaka.It crept across the sky like som...
25/02/2026

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHT
Part 4

Dawn did not arrive gently that morning in Umuaka.
It crept across the sky like something cautious, something that did not fully trust the earth beneath it, and as the first thin light touched the rooftops of the village, a strange stillness lingered in the air, the kind that comes before heavy rain, or before news that will change lives forever.

Inside the house, Amara remained where she stood, her fingers still wrapped around her coral beads, her breathing slow but uneven, her eyes fixed on Obinna’s unmoving body on the floor, yet it was not him she feared anymore.
It was the silence beneath her feet.
At first, it felt like imagination, like the trembling that follows shock, but then the wooden floor gave the faintest vibration, subtle and deep, as though something large had shifted far below the earth, something turning over in restless sleep.

The old woman had vanished, leaving behind no footprint, no scent, no sound, yet her final warning echoed in Amara’s mind.
Do not celebrate yet.
Outside, the first rooster crowed, but its cry ended abruptly, cut short as though its throat had been gripped by invisible fingers, and across the compound, dogs that usually barked at the rising sun lay flat against the ground, whining softly, refusing to lift their heads.

Amara felt it then, a pressure in her chest that was not fear alone, but recognition, as if her blood remembered something her mind did not.
The beads around her neck warmed again, not burning this time, but pulsing, slowly, steadily, like a heartbeat that did not belong to her. And beneath the house, deep under the foundation laid by men who knew nothing of what they built upon, something ancient stretched.

The walls trembled faintly, dust loosening from the ceiling in thin drifting lines, and from the far corner of the room came a low sound, almost too low to notice, like breath passing through a hollow tunnel, Obinna stirred. Not fully awake, not fully unconscious, but suspended somewhere between worlds, his fingers twitching against the floorboards as though responding to a distant call.

Outside the house, along the sandy paths of the village, long shadows still clung stubbornly to the ground despite the growing light, stretching in unnatural directions, converging slowly, almost deliberately, toward one place,Toward this house, Toward her.
Amara stepped back from Obinna’s body, her pulse steadying instead of racing, because something inside her was changing too, something rising to meet whatever had been awakened, and for the first time since the wedding began, she no longer felt like prey, She felt chosen.

Then, from beneath the floor, there came a sound that no living thing in Umuaka had heard in generations.
A deep, grinding exhale.
Not loud.
Not violent.
But patient.
As if it had all the time in the world.
And the ground shifted.
Just once.
TO BE CONTINUED...

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHTPart 3 The old woman stepped fully into the room.The wind stopped instantly.Silence fell...
24/02/2026

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHT
Part 3

The old woman stepped fully into the room.
The wind stopped instantly.
Silence fell — thick and suffocating.
Obinna’s smile vanished.
The shadow behind him twisted violently, as if trying to crawl back into his body.
“You should not interfere,” the layered voice growled.
The old woman did not blink.

“She is not yours,” she said quietly.
Her voice sounded dry. Ancient. Final.
Amara’s coral beads burned brighter.
The red glow spread down her neck, across her shoulders, like veins of fire.
Obinna staggered back. For the first time since the wedding began…
He looked human, afraid.

“You sealed the covenant,” he hissed at Amara. “You entered my house willingly.”
The old woman turned her white eyes toward Amara.
“Child,” she said softly. “Marriage binds flesh. Not spirit.”
The shadow shrieked, It lunged again — this time aiming for Amara’s chest.

But the old woman struck the floor once with her palm. The room cracked with a sound like thunder, The shadow froze mid-air, Then it began to tear apart.
Not like smoke, Like fabric being ripped by invisible hands.
Obinna screamed, And this time, the scream was fully human.
“Please!” he cried, collapsing to his knees. “You don’t understand what they made me do!”

The old woman’s gaze hardened.
“You chose power,” she replied.
Amara’s mind raced.
“They?” she whispered.
Obinna looked at her — truly looked at her — and for a brief second, she saw regret in his eyes.
“The business… the wealth… it was never mine,” he said weakly.
“I made a bargain. A spirit that walks before me. It feeds on union. On vows. On brides.”
Amara felt sick.

“So every marriage…” she breathed.
He looked away.
The shadow gave one final, piercing scream as it shattered completely.
Darkness rushed toward the ceiling and disappeared.
Obinna collapsed.
Still.
The room returned to normal.
No floating.
No wind.
No unnatural heat.
Just silence.

Amara slowly lowered her hands.
The coral beads cooled against her skin.
When she looked up again—
The old woman was still there.
Watching her.
And this time…
There was no kindness in her face.
“Do not celebrate yet,” the old woman said.
Amara’s heart dropped.
“The spirit you destroyed…” she continued,
“…was only the messenger.”
The walls trembled.
Somewhere far beneath the house—
Something moved.
Slow.
Heavy.
Ancient.

Obinna’s eyes suddenly snapped open.
But they were no longer his.
And outside…
In the first light of dawn…
Amara saw something that made her blood run cold.
Across the village sand—
Hundreds of shadows stretched toward the house.
But there was no one standing to cast them.

To be continued…
Follow La Senyera for more

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHTPart 2Amara’s breath locked in her chest.Obinna was still sitting on the bed.But his sha...
21/02/2026

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHT
Part 2

Amara’s breath locked in her chest.

Obinna was still sitting on the bed.

But his shadow…

His shadow slowly peeled itself off the wall like wet cloth sliding down stone.

It stretched taller.
Longer.
Thinner.

Until it stood upright beside him.

Amara finally found her voice.

“What… are you?”

Obinna did not blink.

“You saw the sign,” he said calmly. “Yet you stepped into my house.”

The shadow began moving toward her.

But it did not walk.

It dragged itself across the floor, rippling like smoke.

Amara scrambled backward on the bed until her back hit the wooden headboard.

Outside, the wind began to howl.

Then she heard it.

Soft knocking.

Not on the door.

On the window.

Tap.
Tap.
Tap.

Amara’s eyes darted toward the sound.

A pale face pressed against the glass.

An old woman.

White eyes.

The woman from her dream.

Her lips moved, but no sound came through.

Then suddenly—

Amara remembered something.

The coral beads.

Her grandmother once told her:

“Our beads are not only for beauty. They remember the blood of our mothers.”

With shaking hands, Amara grabbed the coral necklace around her neck and pulled it tight.

The shadow hissed.

A sharp, unnatural sound.

Obinna’s head snapped sideways at an impossible angle.

“You carry protection,” he said.

But his voice was no longer one voice.

It sounded layered.

Like two people speaking at once.

The shadow lunged.

But the beads began to glow faintly red.

The room filled with heat.

The old woman outside the window slowly raised her palm.

And the knocking stopped.

The shadow froze.

Just for a second.

Amara jumped off the bed and ran toward the door.

It would not open.

Behind her, Obinna stood fully now.

Except…

His feet were not touching the ground.

“Marriage is a covenant,” the layered voice said.
“And you have sealed it.”

The shadow began crawling up the walls.

Up the ceiling.

Closing in.

Amara shut her eyes and screamed the only name she could think of.

“Grandmother!”

The coral beads burned hot against her skin.

And suddenly—

The door burst open on its own.

Wind exploded into the room.

The old woman was now standing inside.

Not outside.

Her white eyes locked onto Obinna.

And for the first time…

He looked afraid.

To be continued…
Follow for more

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHTPart 1On the morning of her wedding, Amara told her mother something strange.“If the gro...
21/02/2026

THE BRIDE WHO SMILED AT MIDNIGHT
Part 1

On the morning of her wedding, Amara told her mother something strange.
“If the groom smiles at midnight… do not let me sleep.”
Her mother laughed it off.
“Cold feet. Every bride gets nervous.”
But Amara did not laugh.

She kept staring at the doorway as if someone unseen stood there.
Nobody noticed — weddings in Umuaka village were too loud for quiet fears.
Drummers played. Children ran everywhere. Women argued over who cooked the best jollof rice.

By sunset, Amara looked breathtaking. Her coral beads rested perfectly on her neck, and her wrapper shimmered when she walked.
Yet something about her smile felt… forced.
“Are you happy?” her best friend Ngozi whispered.
Amara hesitated before answering.
“I had a dream three nights ago.”
Ngozi leaned closer.

“In the dream, an old woman with white eyes held my hand and said —
‘Do not marry a man whose shadow comes before him.’”
A chill ran down Ngozi’s spine.
“What does that even mean?”
Amara shook her head slowly.
“I don’t know… but since that night, I have not slept without seeing her.”

Just then, the crowd erupted.
The groom had arrived.
Obinna was everything a family could pray for — rich, respected, and generous. He had built the biggest palm oil business in three villages.
As he stepped into the compound, people struggled to greet him first.
But Amara froze.
Her fingers tightened around Ngozi’s wrist.
“Ngozi…” she whispered.
“Look at the ground.”

The late evening sun stretched long shadows across the sand.
And there it was.
Obinna’s shadow touched Amara’s feet…
before he even reached her.
The air suddenly felt heavy.
“Maybe it’s just the sun,” Ngozi said quickly, though her voice shook.
Amara said nothing.
The wedding went on.
Laughter filled the night. Wine flowed endlessly.

Soon it was time for the bride and groom to enter their new home.
As tradition demanded, Amara’s mother pulled her aside.
“Remember — a good wife does not bring fear into her husband’s house.”
Amara forced a nod and stepped inside.
Hours passed.
Guests left.
The drums fell silent.
Midnight approached.
Amara sat upright on the bed, her heart pounding so loudly she feared Obinna could hear it.

Then it happened.
Obinna, who had been lying still beside her…
slowly sat up.
Not like a man waking from sleep.
But like someone responding to a silent call.
He turned his head toward her.
And smiled.
It was not a joyful smile.
It stretched too wide… showing too many teeth.

Then, in a voice that did not sound entirely human, he said:
“You were warned… yet you married me.”
Amara tried to scream.
No sound came out.
Outside their window, something moved in the darkness.
Something that did not look like a person.
And then—
Obinna’s shadow stood up…
even though he was still sitting on the bed.

TO BE CONTINUED
follow for more

Address

Ikeja

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when La Senyera posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category