X-Men’s Mystique has reunited with her Marvel universe wife

X-Men’s Mystique has reunited with her Marvel universe wife

For the whole of Marvel’s Krakoan era, there’s been a gay Chekhov’s gun on the mutant mantelpiece in the form of Mystique and her late wife Destiny. The secret cabal that runs believes that all their plans will run to nothing if Destiny is resurrected, and Mystique has been a hairsbreadth from burning it all down if her wife is not resurrected.

Inferno, a farewell lap of sorts for writer Jonathan Hickman, architect of the Krakoan era, pulled that double-barreled shotgun off the wall last month, revealing that Mystique had somehow, secretly, already brought her wife back to life.

This week, we got to see it fire — Marvel’s terrifying shapeshifter and her oracular wife are together again for the first time since 1989.

What else is happening in the pages of our favorite comics? We’ll tell you. Welcome to Monday Funnies, Reporter Door’s weekly list of the books that our comics editor enjoyed this past week. It’s part society pages of superhero lives, part reading recommendations, part “look at this cool art.” There may be some spoilers. There may not be enough context. But there will be great comics. (And if you missed the last edition, read this.)


Image: Jonathan Hickman, Stefano Caselli/Marvel Comics

Unlike in 1989, when an editorial ban on queer relationships kept writer Chris Claremont only hinting at Mystique and Destiny’s relationship rather than clearly stating it, Mystique and Destiny’s 2021 reunion is gay as hell. I for one welcome our newest gay mutant power couple.

And I do mean power couple, since Mystique not only resurrected her wife into a young, hot body as a present, she also immediately politic-ed her into a seat on Krakoa’s ruling council. Now that is a relationship goal.

“Fine. Whatever,” Aaron says as he is introduced to his new white-masked roommate in House of Slaughter #1 (2021).

Image: James Tynion IV, Tate Brombal, Chris Shehan/Boom Studios

From old gays to new gays: House of Slaughter #1 is setting up some queer boarding school “and they were roommates” drama — right alongside its “kids training to be secret society monster hunters and maybe the cute guy grows up to to be a monster” drama. Boom Studios is showing a lot of faith in the Something is Killing the Children audience with this spinoff comic, but then again, that audience is big enough to have gotten Netflix’s attention.