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Chapter 6 - Chapter 6: Divine Banter and Cosmic Lessons

Time since the asteroid hit Earth: ~500 million years (subjective to Aryan)

Aryan Ved floated among the stars.

Galaxies swirled gracefully now, lightyears apart, suspended in silence. The flawed sector still twisted in unnatural orbits — a scar written into spacetime.

Aryan had accepted it.

But he hadn't spoken in what felt like centuries.

> "Silence is important," he reminded himself. "It lets the universe settle."

Just as he began calculating the next step — the chemistry of organic complexity — a sudden flash exploded before him.

Blinding. Pure. Familiar.

> "Oh no…" Aryan muttered. "Not you again."

The **Light God** shimmered into form — not as a man, not as energy, but as something in-between. Radiating mischief like it was a cosmic law.

> "Hellooooo, Creator of Semi-Stable Messes!"

> The voice boomed, melodically. "I heard a rumor you accidentally baked a black hole souffle."

Aryan sighed.

> "It was a quantum imbalance. Not a... dish."

> "Sure, sure," the Light God chuckled, circling him like an orbiting moon. "First rule of creation: always blame the foam."

> "I made a choice," Aryan said. "To allow imperfection."

> "A bold move," the Light God nodded. "Most first-time gods try to sweep their mistakes under a dark matter rug. You? You left it out in the open. With a sign."

> "The universe should have consequences," Aryan replied. "Not just beauty."

The Light God paused, then hovered upside-down, glowing brighter.

> "Alright, Professor Spacetime. What's next?"

Aryan extended his awareness, showing images through pure thought: atoms bonding into molecules, carbon chains, the early complexity needed for cells.

> "Organic chemistry," he said. "The groundwork for life."

> "Ah yes. Life. The universe's attempt at becoming self-aware... and dramatic."

> "It will take another billion years," Aryan admitted. "I'll have to appear as entropy now — guiding chance without overpowering it."

> "Entropy? You're going in full silent mode again?" the Light God groaned. "Man, you're like the quiet kid at a universal party."

> "I am the party."

> "Touché."

They both floated silently for a moment — galaxies expanding behind them, stars pulsing like breaths.

Then, more gently:

> "You've done well, Aryan," the Light God said. "Many fail to get this far."

> "I didn't build perfection," Aryan replied.

> "Exactly. That's why you're winning."

The Light God winked — or at least made a ripple in the air like one — and vanished.

Aryan turned back to the galaxies.

Billions of years of entropy awaited.

Chaos would dance. Molecules would rise.

And life — simple, fragile, unpredictable — would crawl from the dust.

> "Let's see what you become," he whispered to the atoms.

**— End of Chapter 6**

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