Hot smoke and palm-wine sweetness pooled beneath the iroko that night; torches spat orange sparks into a humid sky while drumbeats thudded through the soles of Aderoju's feet. Though the village celebrated, a metallic chill threaded the air—an unmistakable warning that something in the masquerade did not belong. The warning scraped at the edges of every joyful voice.
The air hung heavy with a mixture of smoke and celebration as Ilé-Awélé gathered for the Egungun Festival, the most sacred night when ancestors were said to walk again among the living. To the uninitiated it was a riot of color and rhythm: flowing robes, carved masks, and the trance of pèpẹ̀ drums. To those who kept the old ways, it was a threshold, a trembling meeting that demanded reverence and steadiness of heart.
The Calling of the Ancestors
The rhythmic pounding of bàtá drums echoed through the village, deep and insistent, summoning people from their homes. Children ran barefoot across packed earth, their laughter like bright sparks. Women in finely woven aso-oke stepped carefully across the dust, balancing baskets of food as their songs braided with the drums. At the heart of the town, beneath the sacred iroko tree, the elders gathered in a ring of low murmurs and measured breaths.
Baba Agbónmire, frail but keen-eyed, sat on a carved stool, staff across his knees. Beside him, Oluwo Ayinla, the high priest, wore a silence that pulled the light from the torches into his shadow. He spoke only when the crowd held its breath. "The spirits are watching," Baba Agbónmire said, voice like dry leaves. "Tonight they shall reveal their will."
Aderoju stood among the initiates, the weight of the evening settling on his shoulders like a mantle. He had been chosen to don the Egun Alágbara—the Mask of Power—an honor that gilded his name but also put a testing hand on his chest. The elders warned: the masquerade could cleanse and bless, but it could also take those who came unready. Old stories threaded through the gathered faces—stories of initiates who never came home, of those who laughed at the unseen and vanished.
"You will witness the unseen," the high priest told them. "You will carry a piece of the past. Only those with pure hearts will return unscathed."
Aderoju swallowed. The torches spit and a bead of sweat traced his spine. He stepped forward because to do otherwise was to break the rhythm of his own life.
The Ancestral Mask
The path into the grove was lit only by wavering lamp oil and the occasional faints of firefly light. Bamboo leaves whispered secrets as the elders led the way. A small shrine stood in the grove's center, its woodwork older than any living memory, carvings worn to soft edges by generations of hands.
Upon a stone pedestal lay the Egun Alágbara. It was crafted from sacred iroko, patterned with filigree that seemed to breathe when torchlight struck it. Its hollow eyes were deep hollows threaded with something like patience. When Oluwo Ayinla lifted the mask, the air seemed to tighten.
"This mask bears what has been given and what must be borne," the priest intoned. "You will not be only Aderoju when you wear it. You will be a threshold."
Aderoju knelt, feeling the roughness of the pedestal under his palms. When the mask settled over his face, the world folded. Sounds smeared into a single heartbeat. He felt the groove of time widen—his breath became the breath of many unnamed ones. For a long, vertiginous moment, his body felt both weightless and anchored by a thousand hands.
When he opened his eyes, the grove had vanished.
The Dance of the Spirits
The festival grounds had changed. Torches burned with a brightness that cut at the dark, and shadows lengthened as if to listen. The drumming had shifted from ordered rhythm to an urgent, almost frantic pulse. The masquerades emerged, figures enveloped in flowing cloths of red, blue, and gold; some bore towering headdresses, others clutched carved staffs that hummed with lineage.
Aderoju moved as if led on strings. The energy within the mask guided his limbs in a dance older than any village road. The villagers gasped and cheered, but as Aderoju turned, the edges of sound fuzzed; laughter and shouts drifted backward like frightened birds. The other masquerades flickered, their outlines splitting between the present and something beneath it.
Then, for a moment sharp as flint, he saw them: the true presences beneath carved faces—eyes as ancient as river stones, mouths speaking in a language of memory. Their whispers curled around Aderoju, soft as smoke and bright as a cut.
"The veil is thin tonight," a voice breathed at the edge of his hearing. "Be careful where you tread."


















