I Used “Commanding Oil” to Control My Customers — Now Seven Are Dead and My Shop Is Cursed

My name is Chinyere, and if you know me in Balogun Market, then you know I am not someone who used to believe in shortcuts.

For ten years I sold Swiss lace, George wrappers, and Aso-Ebi fabrics honestly, waking before dawn to arrange my shop before customers arrived.

But the market changed. Customers stopped buying expensive materials. Everyone began complaining about the economy, about school fees, about rent.

Meanwhile, my neighbor, Madam Rose, was smiling every day, loading bundles into customers’ cars without even negotiating prices.

I watched women enter her shop looking unsure and leave carrying lace worth millions without blinking.

At first, I told myself she had better connections or imported higher quality materials.

But one evening, after I closed my shop without selling even one yard of fabric, I broke down in tears.

My landlord had threatened to lock my shop if I failed to pay two months’ rent.

My son’s school had sent a final warning about unpaid fees.

I swallowed my pride and approached Madam Rose.

She did not look surprised. It was as if she had been waiting for me.

“Do you want to sell,” she asked quietly, “or do you want to keep praying?”

The way she said it made my stomach tighten.

She told me about a Baba in Ikorodu who specialized in “attraction oils.”

“He doesn’t force,” she said. “He only convinces destiny.”

The next morning, I followed her to Ikorodu.

The place smelled like rotten eggs and burning herbs. The air felt heavy, like it did not circulate properly.

The Baba was old, with yellow eyes and fingers stained black.

He did not ask many questions. He already knew why I was there.

“You are tired of watching others prosper,” he said calmly.

I nodded.

He brought out a tiny bottle filled with thick black oil. It shimmered unnaturally under the dim light.

“Rub this on your palms every morning before opening your shop,” he instructed.

“Anyone you touch must buy.”

I asked him about side effects.

He laughed.

“Only if you stop selling.”

At the time, I did not understand what that meant.

The first day I used it, nothing dramatic happened immediately.

But around noon, an Alhaja entered my shop.

Normally she would price everything down to the last naira.

I greeted her and touched her arm lightly while showing her lace.

She blinked twice, then said, “Pack five bundles.”

No negotiation. No hesitation.

The total was 1.5 million naira.

She transferred immediately.

My heart nearly stopped from shock.

That day, I sold more than I had sold in three months combined.

The oil worked.

By the end of the first week, I had cleared over six million naira.

By the second week, it reached twelve million.

I paid my debts. I ordered a Lexus. I sent money to my parents in the village.

I felt chosen.

I even returned to the Baba to thank him.

He only asked one question.

“You are still selling, right?”

I laughed confidently.

“More than ever.”

Three days later, the Alhaja who first bought from me collapsed during a family event.

They said it was sudden cardiac arrest.

I felt a strange chill but brushed it off.

Then a young bride who bought Aso-Ebi from me died in her sleep.

People whispered about poison.

I tried to ignore it.

But when the third customer died within one week, I began to feel fear creeping into my success.

Seven customers died within two weeks.

All of them had purchased expensive lace from me.

All of them had been physically touched by me during the sale.

The connection became impossible to ignore.

Yesterday morning, I opened my shop earlier than usual.

The market felt unusually quiet.

Even Madam Rose was not around.

I decided to check my safe, wanting to count the remaining cash before depositing it.

When I unlocked it, the smell hit me first.

Rotten. Metallic.

I thought maybe something had spilled.

But when I looked inside, I screamed.

Instead of bundles of naira, I saw hundreds of black scorpions crawling over each other.

Their bodies glistened under the fluorescent light.

They moved as if breathing together.

I stumbled backward, knocking over fabric rolls.

That was when the shop door slammed shut on its own.

The entire market noise faded into silence.

I turned slowly.

In the corner of my shop stood seven figures.

They were wearing the exact lace materials I had sold them.

But the fabrics were stained with dark patches of blood.

Their faces were pale. Their eyes hollow.

They did not blink.

The Alhaja stepped forward.

Her voice sounded like dry leaves rubbing together.

“Refund us.”

I shook my head violently.

“I did not kill you,” I whispered.

“You touched us,” she replied.

The scorpions began crawling out of the safe and onto the floor.

They moved toward me in waves.

My left hand started burning intensely.

The skin darkened rapidly, turning greenish at the edges.

I could feel something moving under it.

Like tiny legs scratching from inside.

My phone buzzed.

It was a message from Madam Rose.

“Every sale is a soul. The oil takes commission.”

I dropped the phone in horror.

Now I understand what the Baba meant.

Có thể là hình ảnh về một hoặc nhiều người

Only if you stop selling.

The oil feeds on transaction.

Each purchase is not money.

It is life exchanged for profit.

The more I sell, the more it consumes.

The scorpions are closer now.

My hand is swelling painfully.

I do not know if I will survive long enough to undo what I have done.

If you bought lace from me in the last two weeks, please burn it immediately.

Do not wear it.

Do not store it.

I hear them whispering again.

“Refund us with your life.”

The market outside has returned to normal noise, but inside my shop, time feels frozen.

I wish I had remained poor and honest.

Because wealth that demands blood is not prosperity.

It is debt.

And I am beginning to understand that the oil has not finished collecting its commission.