Everyone in Akweya knew the rule.
When the elders declared a no-work day, every hoe rested. Every market stall stayed shut. No one…
Stories set in the beautiful heart of Akweya land
THE
DAY
ODENGE DEFIED THE SILENCE
Everyone in Akweya knew the rule.
When the elders declared a no-work day, every hoe rested. Every market stall stayed shut. No one went to the farms. No one fetched firewood. Even the streams were left alone. It was a day reserved for the ancestors, when the living gave the unseen world the right of way.
But Odenge had spent the entire week clearing his yam farm. By Saturday evening, every piece of clothing he owned was caked with mud. Sunday was church day, and he could not imagine standing before the congregation in filthy clothes.
“What harm can there be?” he muttered. “I’ll wash quickly and return before anyone notices.”
At dawn, he gathered his clothes into a basin and made his way to the Ohmenyi. The village was unusually quiet even on the way to the stream. Not a child’s laughter. Not the crack of firewood. Even the birds seemed to sing more softly.
Kneeling on the smooth rocks, Odenge scrubbed his shirt with determination. Soon he forgot the silence around him. He hummed a hymn as soap bubbles drifted across the water.
Then the stream grew still.
The breeze stopped.
A strange chill crawled over his skin.
From the corner of his eye, he saw movement.
A figure stepped onto the rocks.
It wore striped garments, a white mask with an unsettling smile, and ankle tassels that danced without making a sound. In one hand it carried a horsetail whisk, and in the other, a bundle of sacred leaves.

Odenge froze.
The masquerade tilted its head.
“So,” it said in a voice that echoed like distant thunder, “when the whole of Akweya rests, you alone have become greater than tradition?”
“I… I only came to wash my clothes,” Odenge stammered.
The masquerade took one slow step forward.
“Your clothes were more important than the word of your ancestors?”
Another step. A swing of the whip.
“I’ll forgive you if you can outrun my cane.”
Before the sentence was complete, Odenge sprang to his feet.
He didn’t wait to gather his basin.
He didn’t wait to rinse the soap from his hands.
He didn’t even remember the clothes spread across the rocks.
He ran.
He ran past the palm trees, across the footpath, through the cassava fields, and into the village, shouting, “The ancestors are after me!”
Children peeped through their windows. Old women laughed behind closed doors. The elders simply nodded.
“We warned him,” they said.
By sunset, a group of young men quietly returned to the Ohmenyi stream and found Odenge’s neatly washed clothes still lying on the rocks. The basin was untouched. The soap rested exactly where he had dropped it.
But there was no sign of the masquerade.
From that day onward, whenever the elders announced a no-work day, Odenge became the first to lock his door and remain indoors.
And whenever anyone suggested breaking tradition for the sake of convenience, he would simply smile and say, “Some lessons are too expensive to learn twice.”
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