Tempted by My Senior Brother / Chapter 2: Charm Wahala
Tempted by My Senior Brother

Tempted by My Senior Brother

Author: Samantha Goodman


Chapter 2: Charm Wahala

Even as I reach my room, my face still dey burn.

I pour small water for head, dey try cool myself. My heart still dey beat like ogene drum. I lock my door well, even check under bed say nothing dey pursue me.

But small small, I calm down.

I siddon for mat, just dey breathe in and out. I look wall, dey count ceiling line. Gradually, my mind come down.

To be honest, with all the BL I don read, e normal for pretty boy protagonist to dey randomly enter heat near person!

I remember say all those Chinese stories I dey read, na so dem dey act. Na so one fine boy go just dey enter 'heat', e go need person to cool am down. I just dey tell myself say na book logic enter real life.

I overreact, na just that.

I laugh small, shake head. "Na wa for me o," I talk for low voice.

I breathe deep, force myself cool.

I close my eye, try remember my mama advice: "If wahala dey, no let am use your head take fry akara."

Once I reason am finish, I stop to dey think about am, just go back to my fighting forms.

I stand, begin dey practice my cutlass swing for corner. The movement help me clear my head. I dey sweat but I no care, because na only way to forget wahala.

But since I no know how to face Ebube, I begin avoid am, stop to ask for e help.

If I see am for corridor, I go dodge enter kitchen. If e dey fetch water, I go wait till e finish. Even for morning prayers, I dey sidon for back, dey use hymn book cover face.

At first, e still dey find me, even try apologize.

E go bring small meat, say, "Take, forgive me." Or e go leave message with small pikin, say, "Tell am I dey sorry." But I no fit face am yet.

But later, maybe e notice say I dey dodge am, e come stop to dey look for me.

I notice say e dey quiet, e no dey waka pass my room again. Sometimes, I see am for compound, e go just face front, no smile, no talk. Na that time I know say I don really pain am.

I breathe relief.

My chest loose small. I tell myself say at least e go rest small, make the matter die down. But for inside, small guilt dey bite me.

But as senior brother no dey guide me again, my fighting skills just dey one place.

I notice say my movement dey slack. Even small Efe for training ground dey beat me for footwork. My cutlass dey fall from hand, I dey forget steps. Other people dey notice, dey whisper, but nobody talk to my face.

I think am well, decide say make I pause fighting practice, focus on this my power wahala.

I reason say maybe na time to try another way. I dey read old stories, dey find solution. Some people dey say make I go prayer house, some say make I do fasting, but my mind no rest.

For night, as I kneel for mat, I dey beg God make wahala no meet me, but my mind still dey run.

Coincidentally, gist from the other side talk say one legendary charm don show.

For market side, I hear boys dey talk say one charm wey strong pass ogboni ring dey show. Everybody dey rush find am. My ear sharp, so I quick reason how I go use am.

This charm fit boost power without any wahala.

The gist na say if you fit touch am, your body go strong, you go sabi fight pass everybody. No need to do anything extra. But wahala dey always follow charm for Naija!

You know as e dey be—anything wey dey boost power dey always get one kind palava!

My grandma always talk say, "No touch wetin you no know, but my stubborn head dey always push me."

Dem dey talk say, "Who dey find trouble, go see trouble." But my leg no gree stop.

Temptation catch me.

My mind dey bite me: should I try? Abi make I sit down dey look? For night, I dey dream say I don collect the charm, everybody dey hail me. Na so I begin dey plan.

I think of my slow progress, so I decide sneak enter the other side go steal the charm.

I borrow black wrapper, tie head, blend face with charcoal. I fit hear my mama voice for my ear: "If you like, no use sense, wahala go meet you." But my mind don make up. I go collect that charm, come out champion!

You may also like

He Chose My Sister, Not Me
He Chose My Sister, Not Me
4.8
In my last life, I was the prince’s cherished consort, but this time, he picked my younger sister and left me behind. Three years of waiting, only to watch my dreams handed to someone else—my own blood. Now, forced to marry a stranger and kneel at the palace gate, I must swallow my heartbreak while the man who once promised me forever pretends not to remember our love.
My Brother’s Best Friend, My Secret Crush
My Brother’s Best Friend, My Secret Crush
4.7
Everyone calls me the obedient, gentle girl in pink and white—my mama’s pride and my church’s example. But living under the same roof with Tunde, my brother’s wild best friend, every shy smile and stolen glance hides a burning secret I can’t confess. If my family or Tunde ever discover how much my heart races for him, everything soft in my world could scatter like Lagos traffic—especially now that we’re alone together for two weeks, and he’s starting to notice me too.
My Brother’s Betrayal Broke My Destiny
My Brother’s Betrayal Broke My Destiny
5.0
Ifeanyi Tianci, an orphan raised on hardship and hope, faces a life-changing choice when a wealthy benefactor offers him and his brother two starkly different futures. Torn between family loyalty and self-determination, Tianci must navigate jealousy, betrayal, and the dangerous allure of quick riches—all while praying his hard work will finally pay off. In a world where every move is a hustle, the stakes are nothing less than survival, dignity, and a place to finally call home.
My Bestie’s Brother Spoiled My Market
My Bestie’s Brother Spoiled My Market
4.9
After a wild New Year's Eve, I waka comot, my face hot like pepper, shame no gree me stand straight—especially since my best friend's brother, Musa, won't let the secret die. Now I'm pretending to be his babe, dodging my bestie's sharp eyes, while my own heart dey beat like talking drum. If Tomiwa finds out the truth, I fit lose both friendship and my small sanity—na real wahala dey ground.
My Brother, The Future Billionaire Wahala
My Brother, The Future Billionaire Wahala
4.7
After our parents die, I swear to protect my stubborn little brother—even as poverty and betrayal chase us from Makurdi to the market stalls. But everyone calls him 'wahala boy,' and the streets say he’ll bite me last last. What nobody knows is the quiet fire in him: one day, this same boy will rise from hunger and heartbreak to shake the whole city, and maybe even turn against me for love and power.
My Brother Used Me For Family Sacrifice
My Brother Used Me For Family Sacrifice
4.9
Olamide always played second fiddle to his younger brother, forced by family to sacrifice his own happiness and money after a rigged lottery decided his fate. But when life gives him a second chance, Olamide is done swallowing insult—he’s ready to fight for his freedom, even if it means breaking every family taboo. Can he finally escape a lifetime of guilt, betrayal, and exploitation, or will his own blood drag him back down?
Stabbed by My Sister, Married by Three Brothers
Stabbed by My Sister, Married by Three Brothers
4.7
On the day my sister stole my birthday to marry a powerful army general, I became the shared wife of the wealthy Okoli brothers—three men who worship the ground I walk on. But jealousy is a snake: Zainab’s envy drove her to stab me, and in my dying breath, I woke up in the past, with a chance to rewrite fate. Now, I must outsmart my own blood, survive family betrayal, and choose between a life of lonely riches or dangerous love—before my sister’s hatred finishes what it started.
Forced to Marry My Silent Stepbrother
Forced to Marry My Silent Stepbrother
4.7
Titi’s world shatters when her mother remarries into the cold Okafor family, leaving her desperate for love and recognition. In a reckless bid for power, she forces a marriage to Somto—her autistic, silent stepbrother—turning their home into a battleground of hidden pain, bullying, and twisted affection. But as her own heart begins to break, Titi must choose: keep fighting for a place that rejects her, or escape before hatred swallows her whole.
My Brother’s Best Friend Saw Me Naked
My Brother’s Best Friend Saw Me Naked
4.7
Nneka just wanted a quiet return home, but one midnight airport rescue leads to total disgrace in front of Kunle Adigun—the fine boy her brother trusts most. One embarrassing night, one wrong bedroom, and now she’s caught between family secrets, burning shame, and a man she can’t stop thinking about. If her brother or their parents find out, prayer meeting no go save anybody!
I Dated My Best Friend’s Brother
I Dated My Best Friend’s Brother
4.9
After an embarrassing online romance with a mysterious 'wild king' crashes and burns, Wanwan finds herself entangled in real-life drama with Tobi, the campus fine boy every girl wants but who hides a secret heartbreak. As secrets unravel, betrayal and gossip threaten to expose her, leaving her torn between shame, guilt, and a dangerous longing that refuses to die. One wrong move, and her whole reputation—and heart—could scatter.
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?
My Brother’s Teacher Dey Toast Me
My Brother’s Teacher Dey Toast Me
5.0
Ngozi’s hunger for her brother’s school food lands her in hot soup with his fine class teacher, sparking a wild chase of pride, punishment, and pure Naija-style sibling drama. With her sharp mouth and stubborn heart, Ngozi must navigate public disgrace, parental duty, and a forbidden crush—all while plotting her next big move. If she fails, she loses her pride (and the best egg pancake in Lagos); if she wins, she just might steal more than a plate from Teacher Folarin.