In the early days, before the mistress killing, and life-ruining began, they were quite happy.
Hera hadn't at first, but she grew to adore her mercurial husband. Her godly attributes, of marriage and women, compelled her to be loyal, to love.
They had their first child, a boisterous, kicking baby named Ares. Granted, Hera wasn't delighted with the child, but she felt that Zeus and she would only grow closer.
All she wanted was to be loved.
One night, when Ares' incessant wailing woke Hera up, a glance at her cold bed told her that her husband was gone.
And then it started. Honestly, Hera knew she shouldn't have been surprised. Storms eventually move on, like Zeus' attention drifted.
He chased mortal girls, girls he could impress and meet for the first time. Hera knew too much, argued too much, and no longer fell for Zeus' acts.
Hera cried at first, angry and humiliated. Gods at the pantheon snickered as she walked by, their eyes full of judgement.
When Hera had been younger, she'd been brash and confident. Her mother had grown irritated with her behaviour, and sent her away.
Undoubtedly that was what the other gods remembered now.
A petulant girl became a cold wife, Hera heard one god whisper to the other.
But despite Hera's shouting and begging, Zeus didn't change. When she told him to stay faithful, or that the other gods mocked her, he remained indifferent.
"You shouldn't let them bully you." Zeus told her, washing his face.
Hera gritted her teeth, tried to stop the fall of ever-present tears. "They don't bully me! They mock me for my unfaithful husband. Why do you do this? Aren't we happy together?"
There was a time when Zeus would have comforted her. There was a time that he would have made promises.
Zeus turned slowly, towelling off drops from his face. "I suppose we aren't happy."
"Why?" Hera couldn't stop those embarrassing, awful tears. "We have everything! Ares-why don't you ever stay with him? Teach him-"
"Enough with this emotional manipulation!" Zeus shouted, flinging the towel aside. "If you are lonely, go find someone who wants to be with you." Hera knew it stung him to hear what a bad father he was.
"Because I married you!" Hera screamed back. "I'm the goddess of marriage, you ass! I can't leave!"
"Enough! Enough! This was my mistake." Zeus snarled, shoving past her to leave.
Hera started sobbing again, her heart torn in two. The father that Zeus and her had shared had wanted nothing to do with his children.
They spent their entire childhoods miserable, and weighed under the burden of that hatred. All Hera had wanted for her own children was happiness and love.
And she had none of it.
Flying from Mount Olympus, Hera went to see her mother, numb with tears and cold. But she had miscalculated. Her mother adored Zeus, he was her favourite, the Titaness' revenge against her weak husband.
Rhea dismissed Hera, as she'd dismissed Hera's stubbornness as a child.
"You must have done something to irritate him." Rhea informed Hera, combing her hands through one of her lion's mane.
"Mother I didn't. He-he's abandoning me, abandoning our son!" Hera's heart squeezed with pain. Shocked, and yet, unsurprised.
"Abandoning?" Rhea's laugh echoed on the rocks. "Has he eaten your child? Tortured your sisters and brothers?"
Hera frowned. "Just because you went through that, you're okay with me suffering?"
Rhea's eyes were cold and grey, much like the eyes of her favourite son. "You are not suffering. What do you want from him anyways? More children? More love?" The last word was tinged with scorn and amusement. "You're the queen of the heavens, act like it."
So Hera left again, humiliated twice over in one day. She couldn't go back to Olympus, couldn't go anywhere outside her husband's realm. She put her hands on the ground, at the feet of the golden apple tree that sprouted on her wedding day.
Her fingers curled into the soft dirt, and her hot, vicious tears cut their way off her face and into the earth.
"I hate him, I hate him, I hate him..." Hera growled, bowed over in front of the tree, the cool earth kind on her hands.
"My child," A primordial, hazy voice spoke through the earth. The being, whose earth brown eyes were now Hera's.
Hera's eyes widened, and she sat up. "Grandmother?"
"Who has made you cry, my angry one?" Gaea asked, her voice the rumble of an avalanche. "I hope you made him suffer." The Earth's laugh was a gentle clattering of pebbles.
"Grandmother, you will think I am stupid," Hera whispered tightly, heart unwilling to open up yet again.
But she needed to tell someone. "Zeus. I married him, I am bound to him for all eternity, and he wants nothing to do with me. He shames me by taking on his mortal mistresses." Hera roughly brushed away her tears. "He sires these bastard brats everywhere, and ignores his child. Ares is becoming wicked and rude to me, much like his blasted father." Hera roughly wiped off her tears, leaving a smudge of dirt on her face.
"My child," Gaea said. "My own husband, my creation, hurt me and locked my children in chains."
"So I should just shut up." Hera said, lowering her head.
"No. I tasked one of my children with chopping him into little pieces." Gaea murmured kindly. "Tell me, goddess of marriage and womanhood. What tie binds you the most?"
"I can't hurt him. My godly attributes won't let me." Hera declared, slamming a hand into the ground. "Even though I'd do anything to-"
"Now you sound like one of my children. But consider, dearest, is there not anyone you can hurt?"
Hera thought it over. "Grandmother, I'm one of the protectors of women, I cannot-"
"Cannot hurt all women, but the ones that shame you? The ones that know Zeus' name, his story, and choose to be his weapons against you?"
Hera said nothing, so Gaea went on.
"My child, you are a god, free of punishment after life, and beholden to no one. Punish those who tarnish marriage bonds, and punish your husband for making a mockery of you. You are of my blood, my creation."
In her mind's eye, Hera saw the salacious stories the sun god gleefully told everyone, heard the retellings of a hundred affairs. Heard again, everyone's pity towards Zeus, trapped with a cruel, cold wife.
Where was her pity? Her consolation for a flighty, disloyal husband? Was she expected to be alone her whole life, chained and unhappy?
Hera nodded, feeling her tears rapidly cooling on her face. "I hate him. I hate all of them."
"Good. Use that anger, that violence and madness in our blood. There is a time for kindness, but this is not it. Let them all fear you." With that, Gaea's voice lulled itself into silence again, and Hera stood.
She gently wiped the dirt off her face, and fixed her hair. The answer now, seemed obvious. Hera had fought in a war since the moment she was born, been born hated and unwanted.
She was used to it, but Zeus would never be used to or safe from her hatred.
With that, Hera flew into the sun titan, Helios' palace. The titan sat up, and dropped his bowl of grapes.
His guests looked similarly surprised.
"Your highness." They murmured and knelt.
Hera's smile was the cut of a scythe, and she tilted her head. "May I join?"
"Of course," Helios said nervously, snapping his fingers to get a seat for her.
"Tell me, who's the newest creature my husband is being unfaithful with?" Hera asked, taking a grape from Helios' bowl.
Helios glanced around. "Majesty," He chuckled. "Surely, anything, is a better-"
One look from Hera silenced him.
"The titaness Leto." Helios replied, ducking his head.
"She will never escape my wrath." Hera promised. "And I keep my promises." With that, she stood, casting a dark shadow over the room.
She wanted to see them laugh, when she was finished torturing Zeus' mistresses. Hera wanted to him suffer.
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18 comments
Hera is familiar with the 'How to catch a cheater' book. Now she's reading the 'How to end the affairs my disloyal husband started'. Zeus is a f- I MEAN- playboy and Hera deserves better. I suggest that she is to go to Artemis. The pack of wild ✨lesbians✨ will hunt down the mistresses for her. The Mistress Killer is a great Anti-hero name for Hera. It just fits perfectly. Great job Moonie. Also, how've you been? I'm on hiatus for now because my executive dysfunction is stopping me from writing (and completing) a story.
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Haha yeah, only Artemis hasn't been born yet. I would say the Amazons are more the lesbian hunter types, while the hunters have always felt like a more asexual bunch. But I don't know. The Mistress Killer is a phenomenal name either for a punk rock band or a Greek goddess, I agree. Thank you so much for reading, and I'm good. The summer is winding down which is a relief. I hope it gets better and you're able to get back in writing shape! See you soon, Moon
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Amazonian Warrior Sapphics, and Asexual Hunters. That would make a good story one day. Probably an action/adventure DnD comedy. @PunkBands who needs a name for it: The Mistress Killer. Why hasn't anyone made this a thing yet? It's absolutely brilliant! The sooner summer is over (as much as we all wish the break could go on) the sooner the heat will pass, and autumn/winter will come! I'll be back in shape after all these major events are through and through. Going to camp for a few days, then a beach trip with one of my very close friends. ...
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Ooh, I love it. Your knowledge of Greek mythos is impressive and shows through in your writing.
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Thanks so much for reading and taking the time to comment! It's fun elevating a petty human concern like jealousy up to the level of Greek Gods.
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"Hey, Same prompt!", is the thing I've got to say first, also, good on you for reading up on your Greek gods properly. The story may be fictitious as far as myth(as far as I remember), but it's believable given Hera's cannon?* as a goddess. Straight up, given her role as the long suffering wife of Zeus and the general hyper-karma she tends to get in pop renditions, this was refreshing! Even what we have of her maiden-life was referenced. Thanks for Writing!
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It is fictitious haha, but thank you so much for your kind words! I also grew tired of her "Lady Macbeth" style treatment and wanted to explore her more as a character, since she's shunted so often to the side. Thanks again for reading!
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owo, I forgot to add, the gap between Titaness Rhea's response and that of the primordial earth was actually really nifty as while they were both communicating the same base idea, Hera was more primed to take her gran's wisdom over the more passive implications of her mother's.
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Oh wow, thank you for noticing that! I may have made it super basic and obvious in that sense, but I really wanted that to come across. Thanks again!
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Honestly, its good when stories have that kind of staggered presentation. It usually provides a lot of characterization where you find it.
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Oh no, I know enough Greek mythology to majorly pity Leto. Well done, this piece was a great insight into an often sidelined and one dimensional goddess.
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Thanks! That's really kind of you to say :)
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This is so you, and I'm glad ur returning to one of your favourite styles. Loved this one and camt wait for the next
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Hello to my favourite reader, thanks for reading and also, how do you work around the autocorrect autocrat in your phone? Do you physically alter messages, or?
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I must read more about the ancient gods. They were certainly created in our image! Thank you for this one!
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Thank you for reading! And they totally were :,)
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like a woman scorned...
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She could go and hang out with gods from other pantheons? There has to be a goddess of divorce somewhere. Hela hath no wrath like a woman scorned.
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