A little girl named Jumoke once lived in a small house in the streets of Ibadan with her mum. She was an only child and was barely 7 years old.
She was playful and full of life, she liked to play hide and seek mostly, she'd hide in the corners of her room and behind the curtains.
Her mum always found her of course, "oh Juju" her mum would call and she'd impulsely reply revealing her hideout. This made Jumoke sad sometimes, she did not like being found.
So one day she took her hiding too far, she was determined to not be found. She stepped outside while her mum was busy, she looked around trying to find the perfect place to hide, but everywhere seemed open. She turned to go back into the house when an idea popped into her little head.
She saw the open well close to their house, "they'd never find me here" she must have thought as she ran and skipped happily to the open well.
"Oh Juju" her mum said as usual from inside the house, this time she heard nothing back. She checked all the corners and curtains, Jumoke was nowhere.
"Oh Juju" she shouted a little louder than usual, she was starting to panic. Her hands were sweaty and her voice was shaky.
"Oh Juju" she screamed desperately as tears filled her eyes, she heard nothing but deafening silence and then she heard a giggle.
She knew that giggle, "oh Juju" you scared me she said turning back to see nothing. The giggle faded and fear struck her heart, "oh Juju" she cried out, "where are you."
She heard footsteps that ran past her, she was scared and confused, her whole self was trembling. The giggle and footsteps led her outside where she saw the open well, her head was telling her what had happen but her heart refused it.
She approached the well slowly with tears rolling down her cheeks, her feet could barely move. She stood above the well to see the dead face of her floating daughter. Her heart stopped.
The neighbors found out about what happened and they told the stories to their children. But as they mentioned her name, her spirit would enter their houses unnoticed, her giggle haunted the children.
The stories spread like wild fire and parents adopted the story to scare their stubborn kids, "oh Juju will catch you" they'd tell their children, unknowingly inviting her spirit into their house.
Her silent noise haunts their sleep, she lurks in the shadows, behind the curtains and in the dark corners. Never seen, only felt, her faceless presence sends chills down the spine of children, her name is bane to little children.
OJUJU. The unseen, the household spirit. Haunting children since the 90's.
Well done @darkmayhem! Your story gave me goosebumps! :)
I found your post because @chekohler featured you in a Pay it Forward Curation Contest entry; feel free to join us any week with an entry of your own!
oh my goodness! @darkmayhem! This was superb....You mind is so amazing
Hehe, thanks a lot.
Such a creepy story, loved it! Monsters that take after children are always the most scary yet we love it, movies like IT and Stranger things have had us hooked on the concept that we long thought we forgot.
In South Africa we have something similiar called the Tokaloshi that comes after kids and hides under your bed
FYI I really liked your post so I nominated it was my pay it forward curated post of the week. You can find your nomination [here](https://steemit.com/payitforward/@chekohler/week-38-pay-it-forward-curation-entry) and you can find out more about @pifc [here](https://steemit.com/payitforward/@pifc/tis-the-season-bonus-week-38-pay-it-forward-curation-contest). If you would like to join the team each week. It's good fun!
Ooh wow, thanks a lot for the nomination. I'll read up on "Tokaloshi". Sounds interesting.
What an imagination @darkmayhem 😉 luv your story though it's a bit creepy😐 thanks for sharing your writing with us.
Found your post through @chekohler entry post in the pay it forward contest this week.
Hehe, I'm a big fan of horror stories. Thanks for reading.
You should read another creepy story lije @rakushasu too.. Gosh, both of you are amazing authors!
What a creative horror story. Thanks for sharing.
PS:in his entry for the Pay It Forward Contest I have found your post because @chekohler featured you
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Wow. I can really imagine this sort of thing happening. It's just the sort of thing that would cause a restless spirit. Sad and scary story. Thanks for sharing it.
I found you thanks to @chekohler's entry into this week's Pay it Forward Curation Contest. Keep up the great work!
The Creative Crypto is all about art on the blockchain and learning from creatives like you. Looking forward to crossing paths again soon. Steem on!Hello @darkmayhem, thank you for sharing this creative work! We just stopped by to say that you've been upvoted by the @creativecrypto magazine.