After everything had been given dimensions, power, form, placement, guardians, and worlds Kumar stopped creating.
Not because creation was exhausted,
but because excess always leads to instability.
Existence now carried enough structure to sustain itself. Life occupied its designated spaces.
Worlds held identity. Galaxies moved with purpose. The architecture no longer required constant intervention.
Yet one question remained unresolved. The Continuity.
Not every being needed to exist forever.
In fact, most should not.
So Kumar made a distinction.
Immortality, in his design, was never meant to be a reward.
It was a burden that only those capable of carrying responsibility without distortion could endure.
With that decision sealed, Kumar turned away from creation itself and toward something just as important.
Creation could not depend on memory alone.
So Kumar began to write.
Not scriptures meant for worship.
No laws meant to command.
But books repositories of truth meant to be discovered, questioned, and understood.
The first book was The Gene Book.
It recorded the fundamental patterns of life how form adapted to the environment, how identity emerged from structure, and how differences could exist without hierarchy.
The second was The Multiversal Gene Book.
This record extended beyond multiple worlds. It documented how life evolved differently across realities, how the same concept transformed under altered dimensions, and how variation itself became a stabilizing force.
It contains all types of Identity from past, present and future.
Then came Dark Mist.
This book did not describe darkness as evil. It spoke of uncertainty, loss, and absence of what happened when knowledge was incomplete, and why that incompleteness was necessary for growth.
This book contains more powers like Red-moon mist, Blue-moon mist, Golden-Green sun mist and more. Its basic form was Dark mist. The advance form was Cosmic Mist.
Kumar gives the Dark Mist to a family who live on Elsira. The family summons Kumar using their powers and, to Kumar's delight, takes the book forever.
Kumar did not hide these books.
He preserved them.
And one book, in particular, he entrusted to another.
A god named Sion.
Sion was not created to rule.
He was created to remember.
Kumar placed the book into Sion's hands.
"When the time comes," Kumar said calmly, "you will give this to my sister, Aashi."
Sion accepted it with care.
"And when I give it to her?" Sion asked.
"You will tell her everything," Kumar replied."From the beginning until the moment this book reaches her."
Nothing more was needed.
After a brief pause, Sion spoke again.
"Come with me," he said.
"To my universe Skeletria. Many wish to see you."
Kumar considered the request.
Observation required distance.
Understanding required presence.
He agreed.
Together, they traveled to Skeletria.
Skeletria was unlike any other world Kumar had shaped. Its inhabitants resembled living skeletons structures exposed, yet complete.
Their forms were not broken or unfinished; their biology was simply honest.
Here, existence carried no illusion.
Their sustenance was simple. Their culture valued clarity over appearance. Flesh existed only where necessary. Everything else was structured.
Kumar walked among them without distinction.
Many approached him not in fear, not in worship but in quiet curiosity. They wished to understand the being who had shaped so much without claiming dominion over it.
Among them, a small figure stepped forward.
A child his name was Niko.
Despite his size, he stood straight and spoke with careful respect.
"May I become your student?"
The question carried no demand.
Only intent.
The people of Skeletria watched silently. They shared the same wish, yet none interrupted.
Kumar looked at the child.
He saw no imposed destiny and no power.
Only willingness.
A faint smile crossed Kumar's face.
"Yes," he said.
And with that simple answer, something subtle shifted.
Not in the structure of reality but in its direction.
For the first time since creation had stabilized, Kumar did not merely observe existence.
He chose to teach.
