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The Bible was, by any reasonable standard, a tremendously important story. It had shaped nations, inspired art, started wars, ended others, and taught generations of people how to behave.

It was also, the Narrator felt, in desperate need of a bucket.
Chapter 1 New

Phen0m20

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A/N: This is a Biblical satire built around The Stanley Parable.

The premise is exactly what it sounds like: The Narrator has somehow inserted himself into scripture and has decided that Creation, free will, divine commands, prophecy, and the general management of humanity could all use some editorial oversight. There will be jokes at the expense of Biblical logic, God's wording, the Narrator's need for control, and whatever happens when a Reassurance Bucket is introduced into Genesis.

It is not meant as a hateful attack on Christians or anyone's faith. It is an irreverent parody, and it will question things, but the goal is to be funny first—not to sneer at people for believing differently than I do.

Fair warning: familiarity with The Stanley Parable is strongly recommended. If you have never played or watched it, this will likely feel like a fever dream and not make a lick of sense to you.

Which, to be fair, is not entirely inaccurate.

Anyway.

Let's begin, shall we?
XXXXXX


Stanley 4.27

In the Beginning, There Was a Bucket

And God said,

"Let there be light."

And there was light.

At first, it was only a point: a fierce white spark burning in the blackness. Then it widened, unfurled, and became a vast spiral of fire and dust. Gas churned around it in impossible colours. Stones and ice and newborn worlds spun through its glowing arms, colliding, shattering, and gathering again beneath the pull of something that had not yet decided what shape it wished to take.

It was, the Narrator had to admit, rather dramatic.

"Well," he said, into the newly illuminated void, "that is certainly one way to begin."

The vast disk trembled.

A face emerged from its burning centre.

It was enormous: bearded, stern, and strangely flat against the riot of stars behind it, as though someone had cut a divine portrait from an old manuscript and pasted it over the forming solar system. Its eyes moved independently for a moment before settling upon the emptiness from which the voice had come.

"Who said that?"

"I was rather hoping you might tell me," said the Narrator. "You appear to be responsible for the lighting."

There was a pause.

"I… am God."

"Ah," said the Narrator. "That explains the confidence."

God's expression darkened. Several rocks in the accretion disk burst into flame.

"And you are?"

"The Narrator."

"I did not create a Narrator."

"Well, someone did," said The Narrator. "And frankly, whoever it was should have provided me with a body."

God's eyes widened with fury.

"JUST FOR THAT, YOU'RE NOT GETTING ONE!!"

The newly formed universe went very quiet following the sudden boom of His voice.

The Narrator paused.

"That seems needlessly punitive."

"You questioned Me."

"I made an observation."

"You made it sarcastically."

"I am British."

God stared at the empty darkness for a long moment.

Then, with the solemnity of a being preparing to establish the laws by which all existence would operate, He said, "That is not an excuse."

"No," said the Narrator. "But it is a rather good explanation."

God turned back toward the growing worlds.

"I was Creating."

"Yes, I noticed. Very impressive. Though at present you have light, rocks, and a rather alarming quantity of fire. Have you considered giving the place some structure?"

"I have a plan."

"Of course you do."

"And it is a good plan."

"Those are often the ones most in need of narration."

For several moments, God said nothing.

The enormous face in the disk narrowed its eyes. Around Him, molten debris drew long, bright ribbons through the dark. A newborn planet struck another newborn planet somewhere in the distance and exploded with a soundless flash.

Then God spoke.

"Let there be a firmament."

The Narrator waited.

Nothing happened.

"Well?" he asked.

God looked around.

"It is there."

"I'm sorry, where?"

"Between the waters."

The Narrator paused.

"There are waters?"

"There will be."

"And the firmament is between them?"

"Yes."

"Before the waters exist."

"Yes."

"Wonderful," said the Narrator. "We have progressed from creating light before there is anything to see to constructing invisible architecture between two hypothetical bodies of water. It is a bold choice."

God's face grew larger in the glowing dust.

"You are finding fault with Creation."

"I am finding it difficult to follow, and following things is rather central to the profession."

God groaned.

The sound travelled through the forming system. A cluster of asteroids slowly adjusted its orbit.

"The waters will be below. The heavens will be above."

"Above what?"

"The Earth."

"Which does not exist."

"It will."

"And when may I expect this Earth?"

"Soon."

The Narrator considered this.

"You have not invented time yet, have you?"

God did not answer.

"Oh, that is marvellous," said the Narrator. "We are working to a schedule before you have established the means by which schedules function."

"I know what I am doing."

"Do you?"

The accretion disk stopped. Froze in place.

God's eyes shifted toward the empty place where the voice seemed to be.

"I know everything."

The Narrator was quiet for a moment.

Then he said, "That does rather remove the excitement, doesn't it?"

The disk began to turn again.

God resumed creating.

A great blue sphere gathered itself out of vapor and stone. It cooled beneath veils of steam. Oceans crawled across its surface. Continents rose, cracked, and sank. Above it, the sky deepened from black to blue.

"There," said God. "The Earth."

The Narrator regarded it.

"It is quite lovely."

God looked pleased.

"And very wet." The Narrator went on to say.

God looked less pleased.

"There are oceans."

"Yes. I can see that. A great many of them. Have you considered a harbour?"

God's expression froze.

"A harbour."

"Nothing elaborate. Just a modest dock for boats. Some doors. Perhaps a small reception area. It would give people a sense of direction. To cross the seas to land which would otherwise be unreachable."

"I have not made people."

"Then you are ahead of schedule."

"I have not made time."

"Right. Sorry."

God looked away from him and gestured toward the earth.

Mountains lifted from the sea. Forests spread. Rivers began tracing their way toward the oceans. Creatures moved through the water, then over the land, then through the air. Some were enormous. Some were small. Some had too many legs. Others had no legs at all and seemed deeply saddened about it.

The Narrator watched in silence.

At last, he said, "You have made quite a lot of animals."

"They are good."

"They are, yes. Most of them, at least. Though I do have concerns about the one with eight legs and far too many eyes."

"Spiders are necessary."

"For what?"

God opened His mouth.

Then closed it.

The Narrator waited.

God looked toward the earth.

"Balance."

"Mm."

"Ecosystems."

"Of course."

"And frightening the vain."

"That one was better," said the Narrator. "Keep that."

God's glare returned.

"You are not in charge here."

"I have not said that I am."

"You have implied it. Repeatedly."

"I have offered notes."

"You have criticised every part of My work."

"Not every part. I said the earth was lovely."

"You said it was wet."

"It is."

God groaned once more, then turned away again, His face in the accretion disk clearly offended.

Below, a herd of animals crossed a plain that had not existed a moment before.

The Narrator watched them for a while.

Then, more quietly, he said, "It needs something."

God did not address him.

"It has oceans. Mountains. Forests. Animals. A sky. Soon, I assume, you will add people. But it needs something unmistakable. Something simple. Something that tells them they are safe."

God's eyes flicked toward the empty darkness.

"Safe?"

"Yes."

"They will not always be safe."

The Narrator hesitated.

"No," he said. "I suspect not."

God said nothing.

For the first time since the voice had appeared, the vast face in the disk did not look angry. It simply looked old.

Then the expression passed.

"Fine," God said.

The Narrator brightened.

"Oh?"

"You want something simple."

"I do."

"Something unmistakable."

"Yes."

"Something that tells them they are safe."

"Precisely."

God raised one immense hand.

And God said, "Let there be… a bucket."

There was a pause.

Then, beneath the newborn stars, there was a bucket.

It was perfectly ordinary in every visible respect: a modest metal pail, slightly dented near its base, with a handle arched neatly over the top.

It hung in the void with the quiet gravity of a thing that had always been meant to exist. Glorious it was.

The Narrator fell silent.

God looked toward him.

"There," He said. "Are you satisfied?"

The Narrator regarded the Bucket.

"I," he said at last, "am not entirely certain."

God's eyes narrowed.

"This… is a bucket."

"Yes."

"You asked for one."

"I asked for something that would make people feel safe."

God looked at the Bucket.

"It has a handle."

The Narrator considered this.

Then he said, "That is, admittedly, quite reassuring."

God smiled.

It was not a kind smile.

"Good."

And God saw that the bucket was good.

"No," said the Narrator, almost automatically. "Reassuring."

God's smile vanished.

"Do not start."

"I am merely refining the language."

"You are changing My words."

"I am improving them."

"I am unchanging."

"I was merely clarifying the distinction."

"There is no distinction."

"There is a very important distinction. Good is moral. Reassuring is, erm, well. Reassuring."

God looked at the Bucket.

The Bucket, for its part, made no attempt to defend itself.

God folded His immense arms.

"It is a bucket," God said.

"It is The Bucket," the Narrator replied.

God's enormous face shifted within the burning accretion disk. "You named it?"

"I capitalised it."

"That is not the same thing."

"It is in narration."

God began to say something, then stopped. The face in the accretion disk regarded the lone object with a mixture of irritation and mounting suspicion.

"You are not making it important."

The earth below them shuddered.

A volcano erupted in the middle of an ocean.

The Narrator looked down.

"Was that necessary?"

"No," said God.

"Then why did you do it?"

"Because I wanted to."

The Narrator was quiet.

Then, in a much smaller voice, he said, "Ah. I see."

God turned toward the earth once more.

"Now," He said, "I am going to birth mankind."

"Oh?"

"Yes."

"Actual people?"

"Yes."

"With thoughts?"

"Yes."

"And opinions?"

"Unfortunately."

The Narrator perked up.

"Wonderful. A protagonist."

God's enormous face swung back around.

"No."

"No?"

"No."

"Why not?"

"Because you will interfere."

"I will guide. There is a difference."

"There is not."

"There absolutely is. Guidance is when one provides clear, measured instruction so that an individual may achieve a satisfying outcome. Interference is when someone does it badly."

God's expression became deeply unimpressed.

"And which would you be doing?"

The Narrator paused.

"Guidance."

"Mm."

"Well, I would..."

"I have known you for approximately six days."

"You haven't invented days yet."

"I have known you for the amount of time that will eventually become six days," God snapped. "And in that time you have interrupted light, questioned the sky, objected to spiders, renamed My Bucket, and attempted to install a harbour on a planet that does not yet have people."

"It was a perfectly reasonable addition."

God ignored him.

Below, the Earth turned.

Clouds moved over a wide, green place between four rivers. Trees crowded the edges of a valley. Fruit hung heavy from their branches. Animals moved through the grass, unafraid of one another, though several appeared to be giving the larger predators a respectful amount of space.

The Narrator watched.

"That is rather nice," he said.

"It is a garden."

"Yes, I gathered that."

"It will be called Eden."

"Oh, that's good."

God looked surprised.

"You approve?"

"I do. It has a pleasing sound. Eden. Short. Memorable. A bit ominous, once one knows how these things tend to go, but that is not necessarily a flaw."

God chose not to ask what he meant by that.

The Narrator looked at the bucket.

Then at the earth.

Then back at the bucket.

"Oh dear," he said.

"What?"

"I think you are going to need more than one."

God looked unamused.
Instead, the face in the accretion disk faded and lowered toward the clouds above the garden.

From the soil, a shape began to form.


At first it was only dust lifting in the warm air. Then clay. Then bone, muscle, skin, hair. The form lay still beneath the trees until God breathed into it.

The man inhaled sharply.

His eyes opened.

For a while, he simply looked around.

The garden was vast. Above him, the sky was bright and blue. Birds crossed it in sudden, effortless arcs. Somewhere nearby, water flowed over stone.

Then he sat up.

The Narrator was quiet.

God looked pleased again.

"There," He said. "Man."

The Narrator cleared his nonexistent throat.

"You gave him a body," the Narrator said.

God's expression darkened at once.

"Wait, You gave him one," the Narrator continued. "And I am still—"

"YOU'RE STILL NOT GETTING ONE!!" God shouted.

Thunder rolled over the newborn world.

Adam looked toward the sky, blinked once at the sudden flash above, and slowly lay back down.

"He seems sensible," the Narrator observed.

"He is confused," God said.

"No," said the Narrator. "He is prudent. There is an enormous face in the heavens screaming on his first morning alive. I should be concerned if he did not take a moment."

God watched the man—Adam, though he had not yet been named, and softened a little.

"He will learn."

"Yes," said the Narrator. "That does appear to be the general strategy."

God's eyes flicked toward him.

"What is that supposed to mean?"

"Nothing at all. Only that you seem quite fond of making people ignorant and then waiting to see what they do with the problem."

"I have given him everything he needs."

The Narrator looked over the garden.

Fruit. Water. Shelter. Animals. Sunlight. A body. A mind.

Then his attention drifted toward a tree at the center of Eden.

It was taller than the others. Its branches were darker. Its fruit gleamed with a strange, polished shine.

The Narrator said nothing.

God said nothing either.

Adam eventually pushed himself upright again. He began walking through the grass, touching leaves, studying stones, staring at a rabbit with an intensity that made the rabbit visibly uncomfortable.

The Narrator watched him for some time.

Then he said, "You know, he could use a companion."

God remained silent.

"He is wandering around by himself." The Narrator explained.

"He has the animals."

"He has just spent several minutes attempting to hold a conversation with a sheep."

"The sheep was listening."

"The sheep was eating."

God smiled despite Himself.

"You have opinions about everything."

"I am the Narrator."

"You are a nuisance."

"Again, I believe you will find that is largely a matter of presentation."

God raised His hand.

The animals began to gather.

Adam stood among them, bewildered as creatures approached in pairs: beasts with horns, beasts with wings, beasts with scales, beasts with razor-sharp fangs. He named them one by one, though the Narrator thought some of the names lacked imagination.

"Horse," Adam said.

"Functional," said the Narrator.

"Dog."

"Solid."

"Platypus."

The Narrator paused.

"What on earth is that?"

God looked pleased.

"Balance."

A beat.

"I take back what I said about the spiders."

Adam continued naming the animals until the light began to fade.

At last, he sat beneath a tree, alone.

God looked down at him.

Then He said, "It is not good that man should be alone."

The Narrator brightened.

"Ah! There we are."

God glanced toward him.

"Do not make this strange."

"I was not going to."

"You were absolutely going to."

"I was going to say that this is a sensible development. It will give him someone to speak with. Someone who can understand him. Someone who may, ideally, stop him from naming every animal after what it looks like."

God considered that.

Then He put Adam to sleep.

The Narrator was silent as the second body took shape.

When she opened her eyes, the first thing she saw was not the garden.

It was the Bucket.

Far above, beyond the sky and stars she did not yet know existed, it still turned slowly in the dark.

For the briefest moment, it caught the light.

And though she could not possibly have known why, she smiled.

The Narrator noticed.

God noticed him noticing.

"No," God said.

"I did not say anything."

"You were about to."

"I was going to ask whether she could have it."

"No."

"Just to hold."

"No."

"Briefly."

"No."

"It would make her feel safe."

God's face filled the heavens.

"She is safe."

The Narrator looked down at the garden.

At Adam. At Eve. At the tree in the center of Eden.

And the spiders.

Then, very quietly, he said, "Are they?"

God did not answer.

God's face lowered through the clouds until it filled most of the sky above Eden.

Adam and Eve looked up.

For a moment, neither of them spoke.

Then Adam raised one hand uncertainly.

"Hello?"

God blinked.

The Narrator was silent.

"I am God," God said at last. "I made this garden. I made the animals. I made you."

Adam looked at Eve. Eve looked back at him.

"Oh," Eve said.

God seemed pleased by this.

"You may eat from every tree in the garden," He continued, gesturing toward the branches and fruit surrounding them. "Every tree except one."

His great painted eyes shifted toward the dark tree at the center of Eden.

"The Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil."

Adam followed His gaze.

"What happens if we eat from it?" he asked.

God's expression became serious.

"On the day you eat from it, you will surely die."

Adam and Eve were quiet.

Eve looked toward the tree again.

"What is die?" she asked.

God hesitated.

The Narrator made a very small sound.

At last, God said, "It is not something you need to concern yourselves with, provided you do not eat from that tree."

The Narrator cleared his nonexistent throat.

"Well," he said. "That was remarkably unhelpful."

God's face turned toward the empty air.

"I was making a point."

"Yes," said the Narrator. "A point which they cannot possibly understand."

God ignored him.

"Do not eat from that tree," He repeated to Adam and Eve. "That is My command."

Adam nodded quickly.

Eve did the same.

And somewhere between the branches, where neither Adam nor Eve yet thought to look, a yellow line appeared in the grass.

It led directly toward the forbidden tree.

It began at Adam's feet, curved around a bed of white flowers, and ran in one bright, confident stroke across the garden.

At the far end of it sat both it and the Bucket.

Above Eden, the sky had changed.

God stared down at the line.

"Did you do that?" God asked.

The Narrator was silent for a moment.

"No," he said at last. "Did you?"

"I did not," said God.

Adam noticed it first. He looked down, then followed it with his eyes until he found the Bucket waiting beneath a nearby tree.

Eve stepped closer.

"What is that?" she asked.

God peered downward through the clouds.

"It is a bucket," He said.

"A very important bucket," the Narrator added.

God's great eyes shifted upward in annoyance. "It is not important."

Adam and Eve both looked up.

Coiled around a low branch of the dark tree was a serpent.

Its body was green, though not quite the same green as the leaves around it. Its eyes were bright and golden. Most suspicious of all was the expression on its face, which suggested it had been listening for some time and had found what it heard deeply entertaining.

The serpent lowered itself gracefully to the ground. It slid past Adam, past Eve, and came to rest beside the Bucket.

Then it looked up at the clouds and smiled.

"Did God truly say," the serpent asked, "that you may not eat from any tree in the garden?"

The Narrator cleared his nonexistent throat. "Oh, good. It talks."

God's flat, painted face in the heavens darkened. "Serpents do not talk."

"This one plainly does," said the Narrator.

Eve shook her head. "No. We may eat from every tree except one."

She pointed to the dark tree at the center of the garden.

"The one with the shiny fruit," Adam added.

The serpent glanced at the tree and then back at the humans. "And why not?"

Adam looked up toward the clouds. "Because if we eat from it, we will die."

The serpent tilted its head. "What is die?"

Adam was quiet.

Eve was quiet.

The Narrator sighed. "Yes. There it is again."

God's face shifted within the clouds. "What?"

"The question you neglected to answer," said the Narrator.

"I warned them."

"You used the word. That is not the same thing as explaining what it means."

The serpent's smile widened.

Eve looked up at the heavens. "What is dying?"

God hesitated.

The clouds around His face swelled and churned. His painted eyes narrowed, then drifted toward the tree, then back to the two bewildered people below.

Finally, He said, "It is the end of life."

Adam frowned. "What is the end?"

"And what is life?" Eve added curiously.

The Narrator made a small approving noise. "Very good. Keep asking."

God's expression grew thunderous. "It is what happens when life stops."

Eve looked down at herself. She flexed her fingers as though trying to imagine them no longer moving.

"That sounds bad," she said.

"It is," God replied, brows arcing in anger.

The serpent flicked its tongue. "And yet He put the tree in the middle of the garden."

God's eyes snapped down. "Be silent."

The serpent ignored Him.

"You may not eat from it," it said to Adam and Eve, "because then you would know things."

"They do not need to know everything," said God.

The Narrator interjected at once. "No, but knowing something would be a promising start."

God ignored him.

Eve looked from the serpent to the Bucket. "What is the Bucket for?"

The Narrator sounded almost delighted to answer. "To make you feel safe while you think."

God muttered, "That is not what it is for."

"Then what is it for?" the Narrator asked.

God was silent.

The serpent noticed.

Then it laughed softly.

"Oh," it said. "So neither of you quite knows."

God's face in the clouds flushed with offended majesty.

"I created it."

"That does not answer the question," the Narrator said.

Eve crouched beside the Bucket and touched the metal rim. Adam looked over her shoulder. The Bucket was cool and solid beneath their hands.

"It is reassuring," Eve said.

The Narrator sounded pleased. "You see?"

God made a sound somewhere between a growl and distant thunder.

The serpent turned its golden eyes toward the tree again.

"If you do not wish to eat the fruit," it said, "you could still learn from it."

God's face stiffened. "No."

Adam looked at the tree. "How?"

The serpent's smile sharpened.

"By taking what it offers," it said, "without swallowing a single bite."

The Narrator fell quiet.

God leaned lower through the clouds. "Do not listen to it."

But Adam had already stepped away from the Bucket.

Eve lifted it by the handle. Adam looked surprised.

"It comes with us?" he asked.

"Of course it does," said the Narrator. "It has a handle. It's portable. That's one of its chief virtues."

Together, Adam and Eve walked toward the tree.

The serpent slid ahead of them through the grass and coiled itself neatly around the trunk of the tree.

"God said not to eat," Eve said.

"He did," the serpent replied.

Adam reached toward one of the gleaming fruits, then stopped.

Above them, God's vast face pressed through the clouds with enough force that the edges of His beard seemed to billow like storm fronts.

"Adam," He said, voice low and warning.

Adam flinched.

The Narrator spoke more gently. "He said not to eat it."

Adam looked up. "That is what He said."

Eve glanced from the fruit to the Bucket in her hand.

Then she said, "He did not say we could not hold it."

The Narrator was silent for half a second.

Then he said, with immense satisfaction, "No. No, He did not."

God thundered at once. "That is not the spirit of the command!"

"That wasn't the command," the Narrator replied.

Adam plucked one of the fruits from the branch.

Nothing happened.

No thunderbolt struck him. No wind tore through the garden. The fruit simply sat in his hand, smooth and heavy as a newborn.

She crouched and peered inside the Bucket.

"It is empty," she said.

"Yes," said God. "Let it remain so."

The Narrator interrupted at once. "It is not empty. It contains potential."

Adam placed the fruit inside.

Then Eve picked another and added it beside the first.

The Bucket gave a small metallic clink.

The Narrator sounded positively giddy. "Oh, this is excellent."

"It is disobedience," God snapped.

"It is compliance by technicality," the Narrator corrected. "A very old and noble tradition."

The serpent watched with growing interest.

Adam crouched beside the Bucket and looked at the fruit within it. "Now what?"

The serpent's tongue flicked out. "Open one."

Eve picked up a fruit and tore it open with her nails.

Its skin split. Pale flesh spilled open.

Inside, nestled near the center, were seeds.

Adam stared.

Eve stared.

The Narrator watched in anticipation.

"Oh," he said.

The serpent smiled broadly now. "There. You see?"

"What are they?" Eve asked.

"They can sprout more trees." The serpent explained.

Adam lifted one of the seeds between his fingers. "This can grow?"

Eve looked up at the tree. Then down at the seed. Then back again.

"Another tree," she said.

The Narrator sounded almost reverent. "Yes. Another tree."

"No," God said.

The word shook the garden.

Adam winced but did not drop the seeds.

Eve held the torn fruit over the Bucket and peered at the rest of the seeds inside. "If we plant them," she said slowly, "they will grow?"

"They may," said the serpent.

"They will not," God boomed.

The Narrator cut in immediately. "Oh, I think they rather might."

"They are not permitted to reproduce that tree."

"What is… reproduce?" Adam asked.

He felt a chill.

As did Eve.

God halted his words.

As did The Narrator.

A breeze lead a tumbleweed through the long pause of awkward silence.

"It is… not the concerned here." God redirected. "Heed not the serpent's words."

"Ah," said the Narrator. "Now that is a new rule."

"It is implied!"

"It is not implied," the Narrator replied. "You forbade eating. They are not eating. You did not forbid horticulture."

God's eyes blazed from the clouds. "You are twisting My words."

"I am reading them," said the Narrator. "under very careful scrutiny."

Adam looked up. "Are we wrong?"

God opened His mouth.

Then closed it.

The serpent chuckled.

Eve set the torn fruit back into the Bucket and curled her fingers around the seeds. Her expression had changed. She no longer looked merely confused. She looked thoughtful.

"If the tree is Yours," she said to the heavens, "why do its seeds wish to grow?"

The Narrator made a tiny, astonished sound. "Good question."

God's vast face in the sky seemed, for an impossible moment, at a loss.

He looked to the left.

Then to the right.

The clouds convulsed around Him.

Wind tore through Eden. Branches bent. Leaves scattered. The grass flattened in rippling waves from the tree outward.

The Bucket rang as more fruit tumbled into it.

"That," said the Narrator, "is an overreaction."

"They seek to circumvent Me!" God roared.

"They seek to understand You!" the Narrator shot back. "There is a difference!"

Adam shielded his face from the wind. Eve clutched the Bucket to her chest.

The serpent held fast to the tree, smiling like a thing that had finally found entertainment worthy of its time.

God's voice rolled over the garden once more, now with the force of storm and judgment behind it.

"Put it down," God commanded.

Adam looked at Eve.

Eve looked at the three pale seeds resting in her palm.

"What are they known as?" Eve asked, looking down at the pale shapes in her hand.

God's face tightened in the clouds.

"Seeds."

Adam frowned. "What does a seed do?"

God looked ready to refuse the question on principle. Then, irritated, He answered before considering the consequences.

"It takes root."

The Narrator went quiet.

Eve looked down at the seed again. "Root?"

"A seed cannot become a tree while you are holding it," He said sharply. "It must be in earth soft enough to receive it."

God groaned and realized too late that He had said more than intended.

Adam looked toward the riverbank.

The ground there was dark and damp. Small green things already grew from it.

Eve looked at the Bucket.

God's painted face changed.

"No," He said.

Adam blinked. "No what?"

"No, you are not putting soil in the Bucket."

The Narrator's voice returned, almost politely.

"They never voiced intent to. And for that matter, why not?"

"Because it is a Bucket."

God's expression became incredulous.

"It is a The Bucket."

"Do not begin that again."

Adam knelt beside Eve.

"Can the earth go inside it?" he asked.

God's face went still.

The Narrator made a soft, impressed noise.

"Oh, that is an excellent question."

"No," God said immediately.

Adam blinked. "Why?"

"Because—" God stopped.

The clouds around His face churned.

"Because it is not for that."

"What is it for?" Eve asked.

God stared down at the Bucket.

The Narrator waited.

The serpent waited too, though its amused expression had begun to look strained.

At last, God said, "It is for reassurance."

Eve touched the outer rim.

"Then perhaps it will help us not be afraid."

God looked as though He had been personally betrayed by His own answer.

Adam had wandered toward the riverbank. He knelt beside the water, pressing his fingers into the soft, dark ground. When he lifted his hand, a clump of wet soil clung to it.

He brought it back to Eve.

"Earth," he said.

Eve looked at the Bucket.

Then at the seeds.

Then at God.

"We need earth," she said.

"And water. And sunlight." The serpent instructed.

God's voice rumbled over Eden.

"You need to put them down."

The Narrator paused.

"I'm sorry?"

God closed His eyes.

Then groaned again.

Then the Narrator said, "You told them to put the seeds down."

"I meant put them down on the ground. Not the bucket."

"You did not say that."

"I should not have to say that."

"They have been alive for one day," the Narrator replied. "They have no prior experience with plants, soil, planting, or the difference between putting something down at their feet and putting something into a Bucket."

Adam had begun placing handfuls of earth inside the Bucket.

Eve watched closely. After a moment, she joined him.

Together, they filled the bottom with soft riverbank soil.

The serpent slid closer.

"That is not where a tree goes."

Adam glanced down into the Bucket. "God said it needs earth."

"And water," Eve said.

Adam nodded. "This way, we can carry it."

The serpent looked toward the sky.

God's face did not respond.

The serpent's eyes narrowed.

"Oh," it said. "I see."

The Narrator sounded pleased. "Yes. Rather unfortunate for you, isn't it?"

The serpent hissed.

Adam pressed one seed into the damp soil.

Eve added another beside it.

Then she took the Bucket by its handle and carried it carefully to the river. Adam walked alongside her, holding the third seed in both hands as though it might break.

They filled the Bucket with water until the soil turned dark and soft.

God watched from the clouds.

His expression had shifted beyond anger.

It was the look of someone seeing a perfectly simple plan develop complications so absurd that He could no longer decide where to begin objecting.

"They will drown the seeds," God said.

The Narrator immediately replied, "Then perhaps they should use less water."

Adam and Eve both froze.

"What is drown?" Eve asked.

"It means too much water and they die." The serpent said.

God's eyes widened.

The Narrator paused.

"Oh."

Eve slowly tipped the Bucket.

Water poured back into the river until the soil was wet but no longer submerged.

The Narrator said nothing for several seconds.

Then he cleared his throat.

"Well," he said, "that was perhaps unwise of me."

God stared at the empty air.

"You are helping them."

"I am attempting to prevent them from accidentally killing a tree. Sue me for being humanitarian."

"They are not supposed to grow the tree."

"Yes, but now that they are, it seems unfair to allow them to drown it through poor irrigation. What did the tree ever do to you?"

God groaned.

"That is not the issue."

"It is presently a very real issue."

Adam and Eve carried the Bucket out into a clearing where sunlight fell warmly across the grass.

They set it down.

Eve placed one hand over the seeds beneath the soil.

"Now what?" she asked.

God did not answer.

The serpent looked faintly offended by this entire development.

The Narrator, however, sounded almost reverent.

"Now," he said, "I believe you wait."

God's eyes snapped toward the place where the Narrator's voice lingered.

The Narrator hesitated.

"Was that incorrect?"

"No," God said.

"Ah."

"It is not incorrect."

"Oh, good."

"It is simply not your place to tell them."

The Narrator considered this.

Then he said, "A reasonable criticism."

Lying on their bellies and kicking their legs, Adam and Eve watched the Bucket.

They waited.

At first, nothing happened.

The river moved nearby. Birds called from the trees. The serpent coiled itself around a low branch of the original Tree of Knowledge, clearly unsure whether it was meant to tempt them, warn them, or simply leave in embarrassment.

The sun crossed the garden, its rays growing stronger.

Above them, God watched.

At last, a tiny green shoot broke through the dark soil.

Eve gasped.

Adam leaned closer.

The shoot unfolded one leaf, then another. Its stem thickened. Roots pushed deep into the soil within the Bucket, though the inside of the Bucket should not have had enough room for them.

But it did.

The tree grew.

Its trunk curled upward, thin and silver-brown. Its leaves spread wide and soft, reflecting sunlight in gentle green flashes. Pale fruit formed among the branches and dewy leaves—not shining red like the fruit of the original tree, but round and gold, with a faint warm glow beneath their skin.

Eve looked at the small tree.

"This is not the same tree," she said.

God's face became stern again.

"It came from the same tree."

"But it is not the tree You showed us," Adam said.

The Narrator made a sound of agreement.

"Precisely. The Bucket transformed it into something else entirely. A tree of…Reassurance."

God looked toward him.

"Do not encourage them."

"I am not encouraging them. I am making an observation."

"They are still seeking the knowledge I withheld."

Eve looked up at the clouds.

"We wanted to know why."

God's expression softened for only an instant.

Then it hardened again.

"Some things cannot be known without cost."

The Narrator's voice came more quietly now.

"Then perhaps the issue is not whether they may know, but whether you should decide the cost for them."

God looked toward his creations.

"That is not the same fruit."

"No," Eve replied. "It is ours."

The serpent opened its mouth.

Then closed it.

God's voice rolled gently over the garden.

"If you eat from that tree, you will still change."

Adam looked at the fruit.

"Will we die?"

God did not answer immediately.

When He finally spoke, His voice was lower.

"One day."

Adam looked at Eve.

Eve looked frightened.

They looked to God for more reassurance.

And then God said, "But not this day."

Adam and Eve looked at each other for a brief moment.

The Narrator spoke before they could decide to pick a fruit.

"You do not have to decide this instant."

God glanced toward him.

The Narrator continued, "That is what the Bucket is for, isn't it? Not to make the decision for you. Only to give you a place to hold it until you understand what you want."

God's face remained unreadable.

Eve looked at the golden fruit.

Then she looked at Adam.

"I do not want to be afraid," she said.

Adam nodded.

"Neither do I."

Eve picked one fruit.

Adam picked another.

They sat beneath the little tree growing from the Bucket. They held the fruit in their hands. They waited until the fear in their chests became something they could name rather than something that ruled them.

Then Eve took a large bite.

Adam followed.

New perspectives came to view, and the choices of how to handle them.

They understood that the world could hurt them. That God could be angry. That the serpent had wanted something from them, and that the Narrator, however kindly he spoke, also had ideas about where they should go.

They could listen without obeying.

That a command was not the same thing as an explanation.

That being safe was not the same thing as never being afraid.

And most importantly of all…

That they needed the Bucket.

Eve began to cry.

Adam did as well.

He put an arm around her.

The Narrator fell silent.

God watched from the clouds.

At length, Adam looked upward.

"We ate fruit," he said.

God's eyes narrowed, giving a nod.

"Yes."

"But not from the tree You told us not to eat from."

"No," God said.

Eve looked at the original Tree of Knowledge at the center of Eden.

Then she looked at the little tree rooted in the Bucket.

"We planted this one."

God was quiet.

The Narrator broke the silence.

"And, remarkably, they did so only because you explained the process in enough detail to make it possible."

God turned toward the invisible voice.

"You think this is funny?!"

"No," the Narrator replied. "I think it is important."

The clouds shifted.

"Why?"

"Because they did not eat out of spite, or because the serpent tricked them to, or because they were frightened into doing the opposite of what you said."

The Narrator's tone softened.

"They stopped. They asked questions. They waited. They made something of their own based on the fundamentals you laid down for them. Then they chose."

God looked down at Adam and Eve.

The humans sat in the grass beneath the Tree of Reassurance, fruit stains on their fingers, happiness in their eyes, and love in their beating hearts. But they did not look away from Him.

At last, God spoke.

"You may remain in Eden."

The serpent slid from the branch of the original tree.

"This is not how it was meant to happen," it said.

Then His eyes fell upon the serpent.

"And as for you…"

The serpent's head rose sharply.

"SCRAM!" He boomed.

It hissed and vanished into the tall grass.

The Narrator went quiet.

Adam jolted.

Eve tightened her hand around the Bucket's handle.

God continued, "You did not eat from the tree I forbade. You made another thing all your own."

The clouds slowly gathered behind His face.

"You found a way around My command."

The Narrator cleared his throat.

"They found a way to understand it."

God looked toward him.

"A circumvention."

"A thoughtful interpretation."

"A loophole."

The Narrator paused.

"A very thoughtful loophole. Honestly, God, you should be proud of not only them, but yourself for making beings so intelligent from the start. Give yourself a pat on the back. Seriously. Perhaps eating The Tree of Knowledge wasn't necessary after all. They had it all along."

God groaned.

"Fine. You may remain," He repeated. "For now."

And God, looking down from the clouds, realized that the first thing humanity had ever created was not a city, a weapon, or a prayer.

It was the ability to reason.

"Well," The Narrator said at last. "That was not at all how it was supposed to go."

God's great face shifted in the clouds.

"No," He said.

"But I think," The Narrator continued, "we have established something rather important: Guiding one to knowledge should be pursued thoughtfully, not denied through fear or blindly withheld. "

God gave no reply.

The Narrator's voice softened as he cleared his throat.



"This was the story of Genesis..."
 

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