Story By Shalom Rose
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Shalom Rose

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OBBA'S SELF DISCOVERY
Updated at Apr 19, 2025, 05:51
OBBA'S SELF DISCOVERY In the quiet, leafy heart of the village of Bigalo, where mango trees grow like old friends and the rivers hum lullabies, lives an 8-year-old girl named Obba. Born into the powerful family of the Watershapers—renowned for their command over rivers, lakes, and rain—Obba is the last of eight siblings. Her brothers and sisters bear the names of the days of the week—Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur, Fri, Sat, and Sun—each born with a unique strength and a flowing connection to the element of water.But Obba is different.Instead of being celebrated at birth, she was named after an insect feared and hated by all. A crawling, shadow-loving creature that no one dares touch. Her parents, worn down by life and drained of joy after seven children, chose the name not in malice but in indifference. Yet to Obba, the name became a symbol of her place in the world—unwanted, unnoticed, and unloved.She is quiet, often alone, hiding in corners or wandering fields with melodies swirling in her head. While the other children splash water with their minds and ride waves of liquid light, Obba cannot summon a single drop. She is the only Watershaper without a gift.Her solace is music—she hums songs only she seems to know, tunes that echo with a strange ancientness. They come to her in dreams, in raindrops, in the wind brushing through the banana leaves. Still, she keeps them to herself, afraid they are more proof of her strangeness.One morning, the whole family sets out into the fruit forests beyond the village to harvest wild berries and honey pears. It's a tradition passed down through generations. Obba, lost in her humming, trails behind and strays off the path. When she looks up, everyone is gone.Alone in the thick, humming wilderness, Obba is consumed by fear. Strange eyes blink at her from trees. The ground trembles faintly. She calls for her family, but only the wind answers. As darkness creeps in, she takes shelter beneath a singing tree—an ancient trunk said to whisper old songs when the moon is right.It is here, in the quietest moment of terror and loneliness, that Obba begins to feel something shift inside her. Her songs start to glow. Literally. Notes float into the air like fireflies. Vines gently sway to her tune. Hidden rivers rise to meet her hum. The earth seems to recognize her music.Obba realizes her gift is not like the others. She doesn’t command water with force—but with sound. With music.Her powers are not just elemental, but connective. She doesn’t bend nature; she speaks with it. As her journey unfolds—lost and searching for her way home—Obba will come to understand her place not just in her family, but in the village of Bigalo and perhaps the whole world. For in a land where every family controls an element, Obba may be the only one who can bring them together.But first, she must survive the forest, face the creatures of dust and fire, and learn the truth about the insect she was named after… a creature not of fear, but of ancient power long forgotten.
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