Chapter 3061 - 3061: Dawn of The Beginning (2)
The spark continued to swell, becoming a swirling galaxy of nascent energy. And within that chaos, a consciousness began to form. It was pure, unformed, and infinitely powerful.
Then, from that formless consciousness, a shape coalesced. The energy condensed, taking the form of a woman.
She was naked, her form crafted from the first light and the most fundamental laws of existence.
Her beauty was not of this world; it was the beauty of perfection itself, of a concept given flawless form. No earthly adjective could describe her. She was the first thought, the first song, the first truth.
Yun Lintian knew her. The Creator.
She opened eyes that held the light of newborn stars. There was confusion there, then curiosity, then dawning awareness. She looked at her own hands, at the swirling energy around her, at the infinite darkness beyond. She began to learn.
She gestured, and a star flared into life before gently winking out. She breathed, and the concept of space unfolded around her. She was understanding her own power, defining the universe simply by being.
But as Yun Lintian watched her, his awareness was drawn to the opposite side of the infinite dark.
There, in the far distance, where not even the faint light of the newborn Creator could reach, another birth was happening. But this was not a birth of light or form.
It was a birth of absence.
A chasm opened in the void—not a hole, but a place where the concept of ‘place’ itself died. From this absolute nothingness, a consciousness also stirred. It was not curious or wondrous. It was hungry. It was the necessary counterbalance, the shadow cast by the first light.
And from this chasm of void, a form also emerged. A man, formed from the absence of light, the silence after the first note, the void before existence. His features were sharp and perfect in their own way, but his beauty was that of an elegant extinction.
Yun Lintian’s soul trembled. This was the birth of Uncreation. This was Yin.
He saw them both, the Creator and the Uncreation, born simultaneously.
Yun Lintian watched, his consciousness a silent witness to the dawn of all things.
The Creator, her initial curiosity blossoming into profound purpose, began her work. With a thought, she spun clouds of cosmic dust into swirling galaxies. With a whisper, she ignited the first stars, their light piercing the eternal darkness for the first time.
Life was her masterpiece. In the warm oceans of fledgling worlds, the first single-celled organisms stirred. She nurtured them, guiding their evolution with a gentle, unseen hand.
Plants learned to drink sunlight. Creatures grew fins, then legs, then wings. Civilizations rose from the mud—first simple tribes, then vast cities that glittered on continents below, and eventually empires that spanned star systems.
Yun Lintian saw it all. He saw the first laugh of a child on a green world, the first song sung under a foreign moon, the first tear shed for a lost love. He saw wars and peace, love and hatred, art and destruction. Billions upon billions of lives flickered into being, each a tiny, brilliant spark in the vast tapestry she wove.
Stars were born, lived for eons, and died in spectacular supernovae, their dust becoming the building blocks for new worlds. It was a symphony of existence, vast, beautiful, and endlessly complex.
Throughout it all, the Chasm of Uncreation remained. Yin did not move from his void. He did not build. He simply was. But he was not idle. From the countless living beings, negative energies naturally arose—pain, grief, despair, entropy, the natural decay of all things. These energies flowed across the universe like invisible rivers, and they all drained into the Chasm.
Yin consumed them. He was the silent sink, the necessary drain that prevented the universe from stagnating under its own weight of emotion and decay. He maintained the balance simply by existing.
Eons flowed like water. Yun Lintian witnessed the rise and fall of countless civilizations. He saw gods be born from belief and fade into myth when forgotten.
He saw the universe reach a state of mature, stable peace. The frantic, joyful creation of the early epochs had settled into a steady, harmonious rhythm of life, death, and rebirth.
It was then that Yun Lintian felt a change. The Creator, who had been the vibrant heart of all activity, seemed to… rest. Her great work was largely complete. The universe ran with a smooth, mechanical perfection.
Her duty, her passionate purpose, began to fade. There was little new to create. The cycle was established, self-sustaining. A subtle stillness settled over her, a quiet contentment that bordered on… boredom. She had reached her peak, her purpose fulfilled.
It was at this precise moment of perfect peace that Yin finally moved.
His eyes, which had been closed for eons, opened. They were pools of absolute void. He had waited for this equilibrium. Now, balance demanded action.
He did not rage. He did not declare war. He simply extended a hand from his chasm. His fingers, pale and elegant, pointed towards a distant, thriving galaxy.
In that galaxy, on a thousand worlds, life ceased. It did not die in agony; it simply ended. Plants, animals, intelligent beings—they vanished, unmade from existence as if they had never been. It was not an act of malice, but of function.
The universe had become too full, too stable. Uncreation was required to restore the dynamic tension.
The Creator felt it immediately. The sudden, silent loss of so many lives was a tear in the beautiful tapestry she had woven. The stillness around her shattered.
She appeared before the Chasm, her form radiant with concern and a dawning anger. “Yin! What are you doing? Those were my creations! You cannot simply unmake them!”
Yin lowered his hand. He looked at her, his expression one of calm inevitability. “I am doing what I must. What we both must. You have reached your zenith. The scale tips too far towards creation. Balance must be restored.”
“Balance?” the Creator’s voice was laced with disbelief. “By destroying innocent lives? That is not balance! That is slaughter!”