Kwame Boateng shouldered his camera as salt wind pushed through Cape Coast Castle, and a single drumbeat split the air—why would a ghost still play?
The fortress kept its scars from the slave trade like old bones; each corridor carried the smell of salt and damp stone. Visitors walked the same paths by day. At night, something else remembered.
The Arrival
Kwame stepped off the bus and watched the whitewashed walls blink in the sun. The first thing that struck him was the smell—a sharp bite of sea salt, wet stone, and a heaviness that settled in his chest. He slung his camera bag over his shoulder and moved toward the entrance.
An old fisherman sat near the gate, peeling an orange with a knife dulled by years.
"You're here for the ghost story, aren’t you?" the man asked.
"I'm here for the truth," Kwame said.
The man shrugged. "Facts wash away like footprints. Only the echoes stay."
Kwame did not linger on proverbs. He had built a career testing claims. The castle pressed close, as if the stones demanded answers.
Efua led the tour with a steady voice. "These dungeons held hundreds of captives. Many never saw the light again," she said, and for a moment the group moved in a different time.
At the Door of No Return, a drumbeat fell.
Boom.
It vibrated the stone. Visitors looked at one another. Efua kept talking, but her hand tightened on the guidebook.
Boom. Boom.
Kwame felt the sound like a pull.
The Legend of the Drummer
After the tour, Kwame found Efua packing up.
"Tell me about the drummer," he said.
She led him to the courtyard and pointed at a weathered plaque.
"There was a man—Kojo Amissah. A warrior brought here in chains. They could not silence him. He drummed to hold people together; rhythm carried messages of resistance.
When they cut off his hands, they hoped the message would stop. It did not. Even after he died, some say the beats continued."
Boom.
This time the sound was nearer.
The First Encounter
Kwame stayed after dark. He set microphones and a camera in the corridor near the dungeons and waited. Midnight came and the air thickened.
Then the drumming began—steady, precise, as if the walls themselves remembered how to speak.
Boom. Boom. Boom.
A figure stood near an old drum, bowed and silent. When it moved, Kwame saw there were no hands—only the motion of arms striking air where skin had been taken. Wind rushed past him, and he hit the stones. When he opened his eyes, the figure had gone.
Seeking Answers
The next day, Nana Akoto listened to Kwame's account without flinching.
"Kojo's song is unfinished," the elder said. "He drummed to keep people together. His last song was cut. If it cannot be finished, the sound will not stop."
Kwame sat with the words, feeling the city's weight in them—names folded into family memory, neighbors who still spoke of the drummer between chores. The thought of carrying that sound felt like a small, stubborn duty.
"How do I stop it?" Kwame asked.
"You don't stop it. You finish it," Nana Akoto replied. "Listen. When the drum calls, answer. Let his rhythm lead you. And do it with respect—do not make spectacle of what must be honored."


















