Dead Lover Dey My WhatsApp / Chapter 3: Dead Person Palava
Dead Lover Dey My WhatsApp

Dead Lover Dey My WhatsApp

Author: Jean Gibbs MD


Chapter 3: Dead Person Palava

That quarrel with Halima na just small wahala.

After small time, we just forget am, gist carry us go another direction. For hostel, quarrel no dey last, na only if person really carry am for mind.

Nobody take her talk about "obituary photo" serious.

After all, no be today Halima start her spooky talk. She fit see person dey laugh, she go say the person dey cry inside. E no surprise anybody again.

Since then, Ifeoma just dey chat back-to-back with that fine guy from her dream. She don dey call am her boyfriend, online love don start.

She dey type for phone sotay her charger wire bend. All night, blue light dey shine for her face, you go think say she dey read for exam.

Every night, dem dey chat till late.

You go just hear phone keyboard sound, then giggle, then message go land. Sometimes she dey even forget to lower her voice, Morayo go throw pillow at her.

Every morning, Ifeoma go wake up dey yawn, her eyes red as she go wash face.

Her scarf dey one corner, eye like person wey chop pepper before sleep. She go drag leg go bathroom, dey mumble song.

Halima just look her, then talk with that her cold voice, "You sure say you dey date dead person so?"

Halima dey lean for her bunk, dey plait her hair like say she no send anybody. Her voice cold like harmattan breeze for early morning.

Ifeoma dey yawn that time. At first, she think say she no hear well, but as she see the way Halima dey look her serious, her anger just burst:

Her face change, she stand akimbo. "Halima, I don tire for you! I dey try endure because we be roommates, but I no fit again!"

"You dey act like masquerade everyday, today na obituary photo, tomorrow na dead body. If you no fit talk like normal person, abeg, keep quiet! Why you always dey talk this kain thing? You think say I be mumu?" Ifeoma para, her body dey shake.

Her hand dey fly for air, she even tap her chest as she dey talk.

Halima no even move: "Your eye white don cloud, Mars dey shake, your forehead dey green, and black dey your leg. Something dirty dey follow you. My advice—stop to dey date dead person. If dem carry you go their side, you no go come back."

Halima voice no high, but e cold sotay person wey get fever go shiver. She dey talk as if na true prophecy.

Ifeoma nearly craze from her talk.

She shake for body, slap her own palm on her thigh. "You no well! If you dey mad, go psychiatric hospital—no come school dey do anyhow."

She add, "Na only you dem born with sense for this life? Abeg!"

"I no dey sick." Halima eye just dey shine, she press am, "If your boyfriend dey okay, why e no dey do voice or video call—na only chat e dey chat?"

As Halima talk am, e be like say she dey see inside Ifeoma phone. Her face no change, but her voice drop small, like say e dey come from inside cave.

How she take know? I shock.

I pause, my own heart skip. Na only three of us know say the Emeka never do voice call. We dey always whisper the gist when Halima no dey. I reason say maybe she dey monitor Ifeoma, or maybe na just guess.

Na true—Ifeoma boyfriend never do voice or video call, na only message.

She dey always complain, but na when Halima no dey. Halima no suppose hear.

I dey try remember whether Ifeoma don ever talk am loud for room. The thing dey suspicious.

And we sef no dey close to Halima—her presence dey always give us goosebumps, her hair dey cover face, only one eye dey show, and that eye black no be small. If she look you, e be like say you dey look inside well. Nobody wan near am, talk less of gist.

She dey read novel for corner, dey hum Igala song, no dey talk unless necessary. Sometimes, she go lock herself for bathroom, dey pray or dey do wetin we no sabi.

So Halima no suppose sabi say Ifeoma boyfriend no dey do voice call.

Ifeoma sef shock.

She open mouth, her hand freeze for air. For her mind, she dey count how Halima take know.

Morayo jump enter: "Fifi boyfriend don explain before—say him house too dark and small, so e no convenient to do video or voice call."

Morayo voice dey quick, she dey try cover Ifeoma shame. She snap finger, “Forget am, e dey normal. Some people dey shy for camera.”

Halima hiss: "E no lie. But una don ever reason—wetin be house wey dark and small?"

She hiss sotay the sound loud, like tyre wey burst. For Nigeria, person hiss like that if e wan show say talk no get head.

As she talk am, the only thing wey enter my mind na: coffin.

Na only coffin dey dark and small like that.

For my head, I dey imagine wood, nail, dust, darkness. My body cold. Goosebumps full my skin.

My heart just miss one beat, cold dey my body.

I no fit even talk. I dey swallow saliva, dey look ground.

"No matter how small house be, you fit still do voice call. E no dey do am because him tongue heavy, e no fit talk well, if e try am, you go hear am."

Halima drop that line, then she just stand up, carry her wrapper, waka go corridor. Her back view like person wey dey follow spirit.

As she drop that coffin talk, all of us exchange glance, mouth 'God forbid' sharp sharp. Morayo even do cross sign for her chest.

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

You may also like

She Stole My Grandma’s Name—and My Heart
She Stole My Grandma’s Name—and My Heart
4.7
When Ifedike’s beloved Grandma turns cold on WhatsApp, he’s desperate for her warmth—until strange money transfers and loving messages lead him to a shocking truth: someone else has been posing as Grandma all along. The imposter? Morayo, the ice queen who never even liked him… or so he thought. Now, caught between heartbreak, betrayal, and an unexpected love, Ifedike must face the ultimate Naija twist: his crush knows all his secrets—and might just hold his heart ransom.
I Unlocked a Door for the Dead
I Unlocked a Door for the Dead
4.8
Bello’s Lagos hustle is simple: secretly spoil people’s locks, then get paid to fix them. But when a midnight call from a trembling woman leads him to a blood-soaked, headless corpse clutching the same phone that called him, Bello realizes he’s opened a door he can’t close. Now, the real owner of Room 14B—and his own soul—may never escape the grip of what he’s unleashed.
My Ex Became My Oga
My Ex Became My Oga
4.9
Chuchu’s world scatter when a wrong WhatsApp message pulls her back into her ex Seyi’s wahala. Trapped between hot office romance and old heartbreak, she must decide if risking her job and her heart is worth reopening old wounds. With every lie and every kiss, the stakes grow—because in Lagos, love and drama no dey ever finish.
He Loved Me, But He Lied
He Loved Me, But He Lied
5.0
Ngozi, a sharp but unlucky Lagos babe, finds herself trapped in her flat as a mysterious killer stalks her at midnight. As reality and fiction blend through haunting bullet comments, she must outsmart death and figure out who, between her fine-boy classmate and the compound cleaner, is her real saviour—or the next betrayer. Her fate, love life, and very survival hang on one risky decision, with the whole internet watching.
My Boss, My Daddy, My Wahala
My Boss, My Daddy, My Wahala
5.0
Morayo’s playful WhatsApp messages land in the wrong hands, sparking a scandalous romance with her mysterious boss, Olamide. As family pressure, money wahala, and forbidden office love collide, Morayo must decide if risking heartbreak is worth the price of true love. With her chest peppering like ata rodo and village people on her case, can she escape heartbreak or will Naija drama swallow her whole?
Inside My Lover’s Bedframe Wahala
Inside My Lover’s Bedframe Wahala
5.0
Ifedike, a lovesick carpenter in Makurdi, builds a secret bed to hide under his crush Morayo every night. But when jealousy and obsession twist his heart, one deadly mistake traps him in a nightmare of love, betrayal, and rotting secrets. As bodies pile and the truth unravels, Ifedike risks everything for a love that might destroy him.
I Watched My Crush Fall for Another
I Watched My Crush Fall for Another
4.8
Sade thought her childhood friend Timi would always choose her—until a mysterious 'empathy' bond tied him to the new transfer girl, Kamsi. As Timi shares Kamsi’s pain and pleasure, Sade is forced to watch her dreams crumble while classmates mock her heartbreak in viral WhatsApp groups. With her own future at stake, Sade must decide: will she fight fate, or walk away before she loses everything—including herself?
My Bestie’s Brother Spoilt My Destiny
My Bestie’s Brother Spoilt My Destiny
4.9
Momo, still haunted by a forbidden midnight kiss with her best friend’s younger brother, must confront old secrets when fate throws them together again in a Lagos hospital. As old feelings and new betrayals mix, her heart and reputation hang in the balance. Will she survive the drama, or will past wahala destroy her future?
I Married My Enemy’s Crush
I Married My Enemy’s Crush
4.8
Mo’s world turns upside down when mysterious WhatsApp messages and live 'danmaku' commentary reveal her school’s hottest guy, Chuka, is actually her husband from the future—desperate to win her back before it’s too late. Torn between her streetwise loyalty to friends and the pull of a love that’s both new and old, Mo must navigate jealousies, secrets, and temptation on the bustling streets of Lagos. If she chooses wrong, she could lose her destiny—and her heart—forever.
Tattoo for Her Chest Nearly Kill Me
Tattoo for Her Chest Nearly Kill Me
4.9
When a young man rekindles his love with Morayo, he thinks the old spark is back—until a strange tattoo, midnight blood rituals, and a chilling WhatsApp warning threaten to destroy him. As secrets unravel, he must decide if love is worth risking his life, or if he's just another victim of a curse no prayer can break.
Killer’s Diary of a Runaway Bride
Killer’s Diary of a Runaway Bride
4.9
When Ifeoma vanishes days before her wedding, her fiancé stumbles on a blood-stained dagger and a chilling diary in her handwriting. As secrets unravel and suspicion falls on every side, he must confront his own guilt and a past that refuses to stay buried. In Lagos, love and betrayal carry a deadly price—and the truth could destroy everything.
Who Stole My First Love?
Who Stole My First Love?
4.9
Sade never believed love triangles were her portion, until Olamide—her childhood padi—confessed in front of the whole school, setting off a WhatsApp storm. As gossip, heartbreak, and school rivalries heat up, Sade must fight for her own voice and future, even as new secrets threaten to scatter everything. Will loyalty, book sense, or love win this battle for her heart?