Spirit Meat Ruined My Family / Chapter 5: The Curse Unleashed
Spirit Meat Ruined My Family

Spirit Meat Ruined My Family

Author: David Calderon


Chapter 5: The Curse Unleashed

At the party, everybody held a bowl of meat soup, thick and milky, just dying to dig in.

The smell hung low, tempting even those who had sworn off meat for Lent. Children peered into their mother’s bowls, begging for extra pieces. Some children dipped fingers when their mothers no dey look, licking soup off their knuckles.

Baba Musa was the first. The soup was still hot, so he blew on it and sipped it along the edge.

Steam curled from his lips. For a moment, he looked thoughtful, then his eyes widened in shock.

Before anybody fit ask how e taste, he no even answer, just started swallowing soup and meat like say he wan swallow himself.

He grunted, hunched over the bowl, and wolfed it down. The others stared, then followed suit, faces shining with grease and pleasure.

After, Baba Musa stared at other people’s bowls like hungry dog.

He reached out, licking his lips, eyes red with want.

“Ifeanyi, I drink am too fast, no taste am well. How about I give you ten thousand, make you give me small sip?”

His hands shook as he held out the money. Some people laughed, others eyed their bowls protectively.

Ifeanyi no be mumu—he downed his own soup in one go.

He wiped his mouth, “I no dey share blessing! My own don finish.”

After drinking the soup, everybody felt hot from their belly, the heat spreading to their hands and legs, like say dem dey float for heaven.

Some people began to sweat, faces glowing. One woman giggled, “E be like I dey dream. My body dey light!”

Second Uncle, trying to show small respect, left a bowl for Grandmother, but she knocked it down and shouted:

She dashed the bowl to the ground, her voice cracking, “Tufiakwa! If you chop spirit meat, na untimely death go follow you. Even river goddess go fear bury your corpse.”

A hush fell. Even the children stopped chewing, their eyes wide.

Second Uncle vexed, quickly pushed Grandmother inside the house.

He grabbed her by the arm, muttering, “You wan spoil market for me?” He tried to shut the door, but her curses still floated outside.

“Old woman, always dey talk rubbish. Everybody, abeg ignore her.”

He smiled, waving to the crowd, “No mind am. Old age dey worry am.”

Second Uncle just raised the price, sold the whole pot for almost five hundred thousand naira. He no want anything spoil the business.

Money changed hands so fast, some people fought for the last drops. The air was thick with the smell of pepper, money, and greed.

Before closing the door, he kicked me inside too.

His foot found my back, and I stumbled forward, nearly falling. “You dey waste kerosene like say your papa get oil well!”

His words stung more than the kick. I hurried to Grandmother’s side, heart pounding.

Second Uncle turned around and saw Baba Musa on the ground, licking the spilled soup like dog.

He shook his head. “This man and food—e go chop till e die.”

That man dey chop anyhow. One time, just to taste dog meat, he steal the village chief’s guard dog puppy and the dog bite off three of his fingers.

People still tell the story of how Baba Musa showed up at the shrine, three fingers gone, just for the taste of forbidden meat.

He just finished all his money, drank three bowls, still no satisfy.

Sweat rolled down his face, but his eyes shone with mad joy. “Na today I know true blessing!”

“To chop this kind thing for life—even if I die, e worth am!”

His words sounded like prophecy, echoing through the night.

Next morning, Baba Musa died, and his death na real horror.

News spread before dawn, women wailing, men standing in silent circles, whispering to each other.

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

You may also like

Family Meat, Bitter Tears
Family Meat, Bitter Tears
5.0
When Huzi’s brother Dauda steals sacred meat, a mysterious woman’s search for her missing children exposes a deadly family secret. Torn between fear, betrayal, and survival, Huzi faces a test of loyalty that could turn his home into a graveyard. If he fails, not even the gods can save him.
Fed to the Spirit Woman for My Grandpa's Sins
Fed to the Spirit Woman for My Grandpa's Sins
4.7
When Grandpa kills the family’s beloved goat for a mysterious midnight visitor, harmattan cold isn’t the only thing haunting Okpoko Hills. Chisom’s grandma warns him: don’t eat, don’t speak, don’t look the spirit woman in the eye—or risk becoming her next meal. But as the goat’s ghost lingers and the woman’s hunger grows, Chisom must survive a night where one wrong word could damn his soul forever.
Spirit Woman Scattered My Family
Spirit Woman Scattered My Family
4.8
Ebuka’s peaceful world shatters when a jealous spirit woman burns his mother and steals his father, leaving him orphaned and searching for justice. Haunted by betrayal and the weight of ancestral pain, Ebuka must face powerful spirits and lost souls to reclaim his family’s honour. Will he ever find peace, or will the spirit realm swallow his hopes forever?
Eaten Alive: My Disciples Want My Flesh
Eaten Alive: My Disciples Want My Flesh
4.9
Father Kenechukwu wakes up in a nightmare version of 'Journey to the West,' surrounded by monstrous disciples with blood on their lips and hunger in their eyes. Every rule is a trap, every ally a possible enemy—one wrong move and he’ll end up as the next 'tribute' in their deadly feast. With his true identity hidden and betrayal lurking at every turn, can he outwit demons, false gods, and even his own protectors before he’s devoured alive?
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.
The Spirit Who Chose Her Suffering
The Spirit Who Chose Her Suffering
4.7
Every night, a grieving girl brings food to a grave, begging a spirit she believes is her lost mother. Bound by pain and powerless to help, the spirit watches her struggle—until the girl's desperate plea shatters the boundary between the living and the dead. When the truth of her mother's fate is revealed, a sacrifice is made that will shake the ancestors and rewrite destinies.
Spirit Wahala for My Grandmother’s House
Spirit Wahala for My Grandmother’s House
4.9
When Chikamso stumbles on a supernatural rooster eating bushmeat in the dead of night, his world turns upside down. As family secrets, betrayals, and accusations of witchcraft threaten to tear the compound apart, he must decide who to trust before the Ekwensu spirit claims another victim. In this village, not even sunrise can end the fear.
My Spirit Chicken, My Secret Destiny
My Spirit Chicken, My Secret Destiny
4.7
As the lowest servant in Oke-Odo Temple, Seyi’s life is all chicken shit and mockery—until a talking, streetwise rooster demands prayer stones and starts coughing up magical black feathers. But with jealous rivals, greedy elders, and sacred spirit beasts now circling, Seyi’s strange pet could be his ticket out—or the secret that destroys him. When the sacred cranes start bowing, everyone wants to know: what kind of chicken did he bring into the temple?
My Family Curse No Go Kill Me
My Family Curse No Go Kill Me
5.0
Haunted by a deadly family pattern, a young father faces a terrifying countdown to his thirtieth birthday. When mysterious homework questions and near-death accidents threaten his life, he must confront ancient curses and risk everything to break the cycle—before it claims him and his son. Will his faith and a desperate trip to the prayer mountain save his family, or is destiny stronger than hope?
Blood and Pepper for Olorun House
Blood and Pepper for Olorun House
4.9
Morayo, the chief’s forgotten daughter, battles betrayal, family disgrace, and spiritual torment after being cast out from her home. Haunted by a vengeful ghost pinned under a Soul Suppressing Bead, Morayo must choose between life and death, while the spirit seeks revenge on those who wronged them both. In a house where love is for sale and loyalty can kill, only blood and justice can settle old scores.
My Daughter Married a Spirit Thief
My Daughter Married a Spirit Thief
4.9
When hunger drives a feared spirit-cat into the Okafor family's desperate ritual, he’s bound to protect a dying girl whose soul is being stolen by ancient forces. As secrets unravel, every move pits him against dark magic, betrayal, and the threat of losing the only family he’s ever known. If he fails, the Okafors will lose more than a child—an entire legacy hangs in the balance.
Betrayed by the Spirit Lord, Marked for Revenge
Betrayed by the Spirit Lord, Marked for Revenge
4.8
Ifeoma swore never to return to the land of the living after watching love drive her sisters to madness and pain. But when her old tormentor—her husband from a past life and now a ruthless Spirit Lord—hunts her down, accusing her of a crime she didn’t commit, ancient power awakens in her cursed palm. Torn between the agony of betrayal and the dangerous pull of revenge, Ifeoma must decide: endure a new round of suffering, or unleash a forbidden power that could shatter the spirit world forever.