Birth of Auhir and Apeiron
While gods can reproduce, they rarely do. One of the rare exceptions to this is the creation of Auhir and Apeiron. Already among the oldest of all gods, the twin deities were born of a different, even older deity, possibly the oldest in all existence. Although their name is long-lost, they are sometimes referred to as The Old One, Deity of the Infinite and Ever-Changing, of both life and death, the endless cycle of existence.
Although it is generally referred to as a birth, Auhir and Apeiron weren't born of the Old One via traditional means. Instead their predecessor split apart, ceasing to exist and instead becoming two different people: Auhir and Apeiron. The twins came into existence aware of their past but lacking the memories of their parent, with instinctual knowledge of their abilities and existence, but lacking experience. They were, essentially, fully mature newborns.
Summary
Although the exact structure differs, the myth always focuses on the creation of Auhir and Apeiron out of a different deity, which split apart to form the twins. Some variations place focus on the Old One, on their decision to split into the twins and why they (might) have chosen to do such a thing. Other stories focus on the newly formed twin deities, how they may have experienced the world as newborns with all the faculties of a full-grown adult.
In all cases, the story's main three characters are the Old One, Auhir, and Apeiron, and its key concept is always the Old One splitting apart to form the twins.
Historical Basis
Although the myth is rooted in truth, and quite firmly too, very little evidence of it exists. Auhir and Apeiron are both little-known deities, and what is known about them tends to be muddled and confused, in part because most are only familiar with Auhir and thus conflate knowledge of them onto just one. However, they were both born of the same deity, who split apart to form the two of them. The strongest evidence of this is the twins themselves, their near-identical appearances and powersets, and the fact that they're twins, when deities are overall not known to dabble much with reproduction, never mind forming two at once.
Spread
The myth is little-known, mostly because Auhir and Apeiron themselves are little-known. Thanks to a renewed (if niche) interest in Auhir, the story of their birth is coming back into the light, too. It's not so much hidden, but it has simply fallen out of knowledge, just like the existence of the gods themselves.
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