If your prediction is true, it will likely be the evos who discover why, not the creationists.
My money is that the fusion will remain an accurate explanation, though I also think it is possible that the accepted details about how that fusion occured will change over time.
What I do not expect to see is the need to invoke a creator to explain the evidence.
Well first off, creationists have a long history of being correct (meaning their discoveries were true) and evos being wrong whether it be the fossil record, Haeckel, etc,...
On the subject of Chromosome 2, the more you look into it, the more problematic it is for Darwinists. As is typical, evos don't like to delve too deeply into the data and analysis once they parade something as evidence for their theory.
But let's see if you will?
First, it's clear that if there was a fusion, it was specific to the human lineage and so is not evidence of common ancestry. The fact no other primates have 46 chromosomes shows that very clearly.
Secondly, why is it just humans that can have fused chromosomes and do well if we are as closely related as evos claim to apes and chimps.
Thirdly and this is where I hope you will take a minute and think about this. How did this happen? If one individual had this fusion, they could not pass it on to all individuals. They'd have to at best mate with someone that had the exact same fusion. And then, their children could only mate with their brothers and sisters.
Or do you suppose an entire population experienced the same fusion at the same time?
If this family inbred and continued to inbreed so that all of humanity descends from this one in-bred family, how likely is that? That they would not breed with others in the population, and would not such inbreeding cause major health problems likely leading to extinction.
The Darwinian narrative does not add up here.