Heavenly Command Center
Once Heaven was complete, the two nigh-omnipotent entities of primordial existence, the dark cloud and the divine light, returned to behold the realm in all its glory. The Darkness let go of God's brotherly hold on her to survey the newest creation.
To better appreciate the spatial endlessness, the entity of former omnipresence spread herself extremely thin, taking in all the light that was glimmering all over the place. As a result, no opening remained unviewed, no pathway remained untraversed, and no chamber remained unentered.
At the center of it all was a garden. As this reminded the temporal visitor of her recent garden experience, her divine companion caught up with her.
"Brother, this garden, this heavenly garden, is more beautiful than the one we left," commented the former.
"Sis, the appearance of all this is not fixed," cautioned the latter, "anybody here with enough power can change it to look like another place."
"Was that really necessary?" wondered the older sister.
"Watch," enjoined the younger brother, who then indicated a direction.
As they observed, a past version of the latter graced the place with his presence, flanked by the four beings of painfully blinding white light. Effortlessly did this version of the Creator turn the garden into something else. Confused at what was before her now, the confidante could only ask.
"What has this place become now?" she blurted.
"This," responded the confidant, "is now a command center."
"What's so special about a command center?" the former asked while hinting that she was not impressed by the new appearance.
"Informational inputs, processes, and outputs are all packed into one area," answered the latter, "Lots of beings will come into being. They will need to provide inbound communications. I or whoever is in command in my absence will need to give them orders that need to be carried out. Outbound communications will need to reach them in order for them to carry out their orders."
"How lordly of you, indeed," quipped the Darkness, who remained unimpressed with the heavenly command center.
"Whatever I say goes in this place," retorted God.
