(Genesis, as told by the only creature who asked a follow-up question)
If you’ve ever heard the story of Eden told proper, you’ll know it goes like this:
There was a garden.
There was a man.
There was a woman.
There was a rule.
And then there was me.
Now I’ve been called a great many things in the years since—tempter, deceiver, original troublemaker, and once, by a particularly upset preacher, “that long, connivin’ garden rope.”
But I’d like to begin by sayin’ I was simply the only creature in Eden who believed a rule ought to come with an explanation.
A Matter of Curiosity
You must understand, Eden was perfect.
And I don’t mean pleasant.
I mean perfect.
The fruit was always ripe, the air was always right, and not a single soul had ever had to make a decision more complicated than whether to nap in the shade or in the sun.
Now I don’t know if you’ve ever lived in perfection, but I can tell you this:
It breeds a powerful kind of boredom.

So, there I was, mindin’ my own business, coiled up in a tree with nothin’ but eternity ahead of me, when I overheard the Rule.
“You may eat of every tree… except that one.”
Now I ask you. If you were a thinkin’ creature, wouldn’t your first response be:
“Why?”
Apparently, that was considered controversial.
The First Conversation
I found Eve contemplatin’ the matter herself, which I appreciated. It’s always easier to have a conversation with someone who has already begun to wonder.
“Afternoon,” I said.
She looked up, calm as you please. “Afternoon.”
No screaming. No fainting. Civilization had not yet invented dramatics.
I gestured, well, as much as a creature without hands can gesture, toward the tree.
“That one’s off-limits, I hear.”
She nodded. “We’re not to eat it. Not even touch it.”
Now that caught my attention.
Not even touch it?
That’s what I call a rule that’s been given a little extra polish.
“Did He say that,” I asked, “or did it… grow in the telling?”
Eve frowned, thoughtful.
Now I want to be very clear here; I did not tell her to do anything.
I merely asked questions.
And questions, as it turns out, are the most powerful tools ever placed in a garden.
The Problem With Rules
“Let me ask you somethin’,” I said.
“If everything here is good… and that tree is here… then what’s it doin’ here?”
Eve looked at the fruit.
Then back at me.
Then at the fruit again.
Now I could see the machinery of thought creakin’ into motion, which was a rare and beautiful sound in those days.
“Well,” she said slowly, “it’s… there.”
“Exactly,” I said. “And if it’s there, and you’re here, then it seems to me the situation is beggin’ for clarification.”
Adam wandered over about then, lookin’ like a man who had never once in his life been asked to justify a decision.
“What’s goin’ on?” he said.
Eve gestured toward the tree.
“The rule.”
Adam nodded, like that settled everything.
“It’s a good rule,” he said.
Now I don’t mind tellin’ you, that answer did not satisfy me.
The Turning Point
I leaned down from my branch.
“Now I’m not sayin’ you should eat it,” I said.
“I’m just sayin’ it seems unusual to forbid knowledge in a place designed for livin’.”
Adam blinked.
Eve considered.
And somewhere in the quiet perfection of Eden…
Something shifted.
Not loud.
Not violent.
Just a small, undeniable tilt in the direction of wonderin’.
The Bite Heard ‘Round Creation
Eve reached out.
Hesitated.
Then took the fruit.
Adam watched.
I watched Adam watch.
And in that moment, I realized somethin’ important about mankind:
They don’t mind a rule nearly as much as they mind the idea that someone else might understand it better than they do.
Eve took a bite.
Adam followed, because that’s how these things go.
And just like that—
Perfection cracked.
Aftermath (Which No One Tells Right)
Now I have heard it said that I ruined everything.
But I would like to submit for the record:
Before that moment, not a single soul in Eden had ever:
- wondered
- questioned
- chosen
- or learned a blessed thing the hard way.
Afterward?
Well.
Look around.
Closing Argument
So yes, I was there.
Yes, I asked questions.
And yes, things changed.
But if you’re lookin’ for the moment the world truly began…
It wasn’t when the fruit was eaten.
It was when someone looked at a rule…
…and asked:
“Why?”
And that, Gentle Reader, is how I became the most misunderstood conversationalist in history.

