Persephone’s Legal Revenge

Astryd Bamberg

Astryd Bamberg

This story was submitted as a contest entry for The Center for Fiction's National Teen Storyteller Contest: Myths Reimagined, 2024.

 
Demeter, a goddess in profound despair, embarked on an unyielding quest. What was she seeking? Her cherished daughter, Persephone. They had shared a meadow, their haven, when Persephone vanished into thin air. Now, Demeter was scouring every corner of the world, her heart burdened with fear and hope, but her efforts were futile. 
Demeter, crestfallen, returned to Mt. Olympus. There, she sought out Argus Panoptes, the all-seeing, hoping for answers about her daughter's disappearance. He revealed a shocking truth-Hades had torn open the Earth and abducted Persephone. Consumed by fury, Demeter confronted Zeus, the king of the gods, threatening to withhold her gift of greenery unless Hades returned her daughter. Torn between his brother and the world's survival, Zeus dispatched Hermes to Hades, ordering him to release Persephone. Hades, having to obey Zeus's orders, lets Persephone go. 
The situation was dire. Zeus, the ruler of the gods, decreed that Hades must face a fair trial to determine his fate. After all, he had committed the crime of abducting Persephone, a crime that could plunge the world into eternal winter. The goddess of justice, Themis, renowned for her impartiality, would preside over Hades' trial, holding the world's destiny in her hands. 
On the day of the trial, Hades admits that he had kidnapped Persephone, but he reveals that she had partaken of the food of the dead. Due to the laws of the underworld, those who consume the food of the underworld must return to the underworld sooner or later if they leave. Themis considers this and determines that because there was trickery in getting Persephone to the underworld, she would dismiss the law of the underworld and allow Persephone to stay with her mother, Demeter. Themis ruled Hades for all eternity and would be alone in the underworld for his crime. 
Now, Demeter and Persephone joyfully coexist year-round. But to commemorate the loss of her daughter, Demeter withholds plant growth for six months. After that, they rejoice in Persephone's return for the rest of the year, and the entire Earth bursts into bloom, signaling the arrival of spring. 
Demeter, being the kind-hearted goddess she is, doesn't want humanity to starve while she grieves the memory of her daughter's kidnapping. So she lent her chariot, laden with grain, to Triptoelmus and taught him to scatter her golden grain over the world and teach men to sow it in spring, reap it in fall, and store it away for the long months while the Earth was barren and cold. 
As the memory of the kidnapping fades, the seasons on Earth do as well. As Demeter forgets and remembers randomly, the seasons change to match her emotions more than the structured months of spring and winter. This is hard on man because once the memory completely fades, the seasons will no longer exist, which man has grown accustomed to, and that change will change the world for the worse.
 

This was an entry for a writing contest held in conjunction with Center for Fiction and The Decameron Project
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