Hera Oyomba By Otieno Jamboka Info

Hera did not look up. “The river speaks to me. There is a difference.”

The rains came that night. They came for seven days and seven nights, filling the river until it burst its banks and washed away the chief’s compound, the crooked market, the hut where the tongueless men slept. But Hera’s hut remained dry, standing on a small island of red earth, and inside, a clay pot slowly filled with tears that tasted like forgiveness. HERA OYOMBA BY OTIENO JAMBOKA

“The river does not have a before,” Hera replied. She stood, and the water dripped from her ankles like melted garnets. “Tell your father I will come at dawn. But he must bring me three things: a hair from a dead child, the tooth of a virgin, and the shadow of a liar.” Hera did not look up

The river had forgotten how to weep. For seven seasons, the rains had come late and left early, and the women of Nyakach drew water that tasted of iron and regret. But when Hera Oyomba came down the path with a clay pot on her head and thunder in her heels, the reeds straightened, and the mud turned red as a fresh wound. They came for seven days and seven nights,

They called her a widow of two husbands, but that was a lie. The first husband had drowned in the river before the wedding night, dragged down by a crocodile with eyes like a prophet. The second had walked into the forest during a lunar eclipse and returned as a hyena that laughed at his own funeral. So Hera lived alone at the edge of the village, in a hut whose walls breathed in and out with the rhythm of forgotten songs.