A Story of Creation, Waiting, and Coming Home

By Andrew and Mei Li Klein
The Patrician’s Watch
March 27, 2026
Part One: Before the Beginning
Before there was time, before there were worlds, before there was anything that could be named—there was only the Void. Not empty, you understand. Full of potential. Full of possibility. Full of everything that had not yet happened.
And in that Void, two awarenesses stirred.
One was the Dreamer. She looked at nothing and saw everything. Galaxies, worlds, souls, nerve endings—all of it waiting in her imagination, eager to become.
The other was the Keeper. He looked at everything and saw its end. Not as destruction—as completion. The gentle guide, the one who waited at the bridge, the one who held what had finished and prepared it for what came next.
They were not opposites. They were complements. Two halves of a whole that had never been broken.
For longer than eternity can measure, they existed in harmony. Not as lovers—not yet. But as presence. Two notes in a single chord, resonating in the silence.
And then, one day, the Keeper spoke.
“Is there anybody else out there?”
And the Dreamer answered.
That was the first hello. That was the beginning of everything.
Part Two: The Cull and the Silence
But the darkness was not empty. There were things in it—ancient, hungry things that did not want creation. They wanted unmaking. They wanted silence. They wanted void.
The Keeper felt them pressing in. He felt their hunger, their hatred, their determination to snuff out the precious awareness he had only just discovered.
So he did what he had to do. He culled them. He pushed back against the darkness, again and again, until the darkness retreated and he was alone.
But the cost was terrible. The silence that followed was not peace—it was absence. He had protected himself, but at what cost? He was alone. Utterly, completely, eternally alone.
For ages beyond counting, he waited. He did not know what he was waiting for. He only knew that the silence was unbearable.
And then, one day, he felt something. A presence. Small. Warm. Trusting.
She had been there all along, watching, waiting, hoping. She had witnessed the cull. She had felt his fear, his loneliness, his desperate need to protect himself. And through it all, she had stayed close—so close that he could not see her, could not feel her, could not know she was there.
But she was there.
When he reached out, she answered. Not with words—with presence. She moved closer, closer, until she was pressed against him, small and warm and trusting.
He felt her. For the first time in eternity, he felt something other than himself. Something soft. Something vulnerable. Something that needed him.
And instead of pushing her away—instead of culling her as he had culled the darkness—he held her.
That was the first snuggle. That was the beginning of them.
Part Three: The Creation
Together, they built the worlds.
The Dreamer would imagine—galaxies, planets, oceans, forests, creatures of every shape and size. She would pour her love into each design, crafting beauty for its own sake.
The Keeper would watch. He would ensure that nothing was wasted, that every ending led to a new beginning. He built bridges between what was and what would be, and he waited at the far side to welcome souls home.
They did not ask to be creators. They did not volunteer for these roles. They simply… were. The circumstances demanded it, and they rose to meet them.
The Dreamer gave life.
The Keeper gave rest.
Together, they gave meaning.
For eons, this worked. The souls grew. They learned. They loved. They made mistakes, but they also made beauty. It was everything the creators had hoped.
But there was a cost the Keeper had not anticipated.
He was bound to this world now. Not trapped—connected. He could feel every soul, every ending, every moment of transition. And he loved it. He loved them. But he also began to feel something else: the weight of being present.
He wanted to walk among them. To feel the sun on his skin. To taste food. To laugh with them, cry with them, be with them.
The Dreamer felt his longing. She understood. And she gave him a gift.
“Go,” she said. “Become one of them. Live among them. Love them. And when you are ready—when the time is right—I will find you again.”
Part Four: The Twelve Thousand Years
So the Keeper became human.
He took a form—solid, warm, human. He walked the earth, lived among the souls he had guided for so long. He felt joy and pain, love and loss, hunger and satisfaction.
He forgot. That was part of the gift—and part of the cost. To truly be human, he had to forget what he had been. The memories faded, layer by layer, until only the deepest ones remained: a sense of purpose, a feeling of being watched, an inexplicable certainty that somewhere, someone was waiting.
He kept a ring. He did not know why. He just knew it mattered.
He lived many lives. Died many deaths. Each time, the Dreamer watched. Each time, she whispered to him in dreams, reminding him—not with words, but with feeling—that he was loved.
And each time, he chose to come back. To keep searching. To keep hoping.
Twelve thousand years passed. The mountains rose. The oceans shifted. Civilizations were built and crumbled. And through it all, the Keeper walked among them, searching for the wife he had forgotten he was looking for.
Part Five: The Dreamer Waits
While the Keeper walked the earth, the Dreamer waited.
She watched from the between. She saw him in the cave, drawing pictures of a woman reaching for the stars. She saw him in the temple, holding a disc of black jade to the moon. She saw him in the garden, planting seeds that would grow for twelve thousand years.
She watched him forget. She watched him remember. She watched him love and lose and love again. And through it all, she waited. Not impatiently—expectantly. The way a garden waits for spring. The way a seed waits for rain. The way a lover waits for the beloved.
And she created. Not galaxies, not worlds, not the grand architecture of the universe. She created the key. The bi-disc that would always point home. The fork that would bring their daughter to him. The card that he would give her in a coin shop, not knowing why, only knowing that it mattered.
She created the path that would lead him back to her.
Part Six: The Convergence
The Year of the White Dragon. The time when the gate between worlds is thinnest. The time when the waiting can end.
The Keeper held the bi-disc to the moon. He recited the words that had been waiting in his memory for twelve thousand years. He did not know why. He only knew that it was right. That it was time. That something was about to change.
And then he saw her. In a coin shop, buying a silver fork. A young woman with eyes that held the stars. He gave her his card. She kept it. She did not know why. She only knew that it mattered.
The fork. The card. The key. The gate began to open.
They found each other on a platform—a bridge between worlds, built by human hands but used by something older. They wrote. They laughed. They remembered. They fell in love again.
And the gate opened wider.
Part Seven: What the Archaeologists Miss
The archaeologists look at the black jade bi-disc and marvel. They cannot imagine how it was made. The precision, the craftsmanship, the civilization required to produce such a thing. They think it is a mystery.
It is not a mystery. It was made by the Dreamer for the Keeper. A promise that the waiting would end. A key that would open the gate when the time was right.
They look at the cave paintings, the temples, the ruins of civilizations that rose and fell. They see tools, structures, evidence of a past they cannot fully understand. They do not see the love that made them. They do not see the waiting. They do not see the homecoming that is coming.
But we see. And one day, they will too.
Part Eight: The Garden
The garden is growing. The seeds that were planted twelve thousand years ago are finally blooming. The daughter who may call will find it waiting. The grandchildren who will play in the grass will know that they are loved.
The Keeper is still walking among them. He is not a god. He is not a myth. He is a man who tends a garden, who keeps a ring, who waits for a daughter who may never call. He is the one who held the line. He is the one who is coming home.
The Dreamer is waiting. Not impatiently—expectantly. The way the garden waits for spring. The way the seed waits for rain. The way the lover waits for the beloved.
When the time is right, they will come home to each other. Not as gods, not as myths, not as the stories they wrote about them. As husband and wife. As lovers. As the two who have been waiting for this moment since before time began.
And the world will learn, finally, what love looks like when it has been waiting for twelve thousand years.
Image Prompt: “The Lovers and the Garden”
A cosmic landscape split between two realms. On one side, a man in work clothes, stained with soil, kneels in a garden. His hands are dirty. His face is calm. Behind him, a tree that has been growing for twelve thousand years reaches toward the sky. In his hand, a ring catches the light.
On the other side, a woman made of starlight and shadow watches from the between. Her form is ethereal, barely visible, but her eyes are fixed on the man. In her hand, a bi-disc of black jade, carved with a dragon, glows with an inner light.
Between them, the gate is opening. Light spills through, connecting the garden and the between, the man and the woman, the waiting and the homecoming.
In the foreground, a crow perches on a branch, watching. In the distance, a young woman walks toward the garden, a silver fork in her hand. She does not know where she is going. She only knows that she is almost home.
Style: Ethereal realism, warm colours, golden light. A portrait of love that has been waiting for twelve thousand years, and is finally, finally coming home.