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Chapter 34: The Hardy Connection New
The vibe inside Oscorp Tower is different from the moment I step into the lobby. It's subtle—nothing dramatic like alarms or guards sprinting around—but it's there all the same, humming under the polished marble and glass like a live wire someone forgot to insulate. Conversations dip when I pass. Eyes linger a half-second longer than usual. Even the air feels tighter, filtered and sterile in a way that presses against the back of my throat.

One of the secretaries—the same one who's given me trouble every single time I've come in—locks onto me almost immediately. She doesn't frown this time. Doesn't make a show of checking credentials or asking me to wait. She just straightens, smooths her skirt, and says, "Mr. Osborn is expecting you," like she's been rehearsing the line. The emphasis isn't on expecting. It's on you.

Yeah. I bet he is.

I'd thought about messaging him on the way over, something short and controlled. Break-in handled. I'm fine. We'll talk later. But that would've been pointless. Either the security guards already told him or he's reviewed the footage himself. Norman doesn't strike me as the type to wait for summaries when he can see things with his own eyes. Either way, he knows I got involved. At least this way, I don't have to explain how I found out in the first place. The conversation is going to be heated enough without me digging that hole too.

I move toward the elevators, shoulders tight, every step measured. My body wants to go. Not run—just move. The adrenaline hasn't fully burned off yet, and even with the aches settling in, I feel like a coiled spring that's been left wound too long. My ribs protest when I breathe too deep. My shoulder tugs when I shift my weight. The smaller injuries—the kind you don't feel until later—are already making themselves known.

The scratches on my face sting when I move my jaw the wrong way. Felicia hadn't held back. Not that I blame her. Still, explaining those is going to be a nightmare.

Oh, shit. MJ.

If I see her before they heal, I'm dead. No, worse—questioned. I could try the cat excuse. I mean, technically not a lie. Just… aggressively incomplete. But she's not stupid, and she's especially not stupid when it comes to me. She'll clock the angle, the spacing, the fact that cats don't usually leave marks like that.

If I play it right, maybe I can dodge it. Act casual. Change the subject. Pretend I didn't notice her noticing.

The elevator doors slide open, and I step inside alone. The mirrors don't help. I look rougher than I feel, which is saying something. Jacket zipped higher than usual. Collar pulled up just enough to shadow my jaw. I keep my head slightly down, more out of habit than necessity. The doors close with a soft thunk that sounds too final for my liking.

The ride up takes forever.

Every second stretches, the numbers ticking by at a pace that feels deliberately slow. My leg bounces once before I force it still. I flex my fingers, then stop when my knuckles twinge. My mind keeps circling the same points, picking at them like loose threads. Red Vulture. The archive. The Jackal mask. Norman knowing—or not knowing—how much of this.

I keep telling myself to stay focused. Controlled. This isn't a confrontation; it's a conversation. But that's a lie, and I know it. Norman doesn't do neutral conversations. Neither do I, apparently.

When the doors finally open, the smell hits me first.

Chemicals. Cleaners. Ozone, faint but unmistakable. It's the same smell that always hangs around this level, sharp and clinical, like the building itself is reminding you that this is where things get taken apart and put back together wrong. The janitor is just finishing up his rounds, pushing the cart toward the far end of the hall. He gives me a nod—not friendly, not hostile. Professional. I've noticed him before. He does four rounds on the floors throughout the day, per shift. More if it's a medical or containment level. This one stays on schedule. Always has.

That detail sticks in my head longer than it should.

I step off the elevator, shoes whispering against the polished floor, and the hum of the building settles around me again. The lights here are brighter, harsher. No decorative warmth. Just function. Efficiency. Everything about Oscorp feels designed to make people feel small without realizing why.

Norman is waiting by the security desk.

Not pacing. Not seated. Just standing there, hands folded behind his back, posture straight in that way that never looks stiff on him. He doesn't turn right away when I approach. He doesn't need to. He knows exactly when I step onto the floor. The guards don't say a word. They don't need to either.

I slow, just a fraction.

The distance between us feels longer than it is, every step echoing a little louder than it should. I can feel the weight of his attention before he finally looks at me, sharp and assessing, like he's already running through a list of questions and deciding which ones hurt the most.

He takes in the jacket. The way I'm favoring one side. The marks I didn't quite manage to hide.

Then he speaks:

"Peter."

He says it warm enough to pass for friendly, but there's weight behind it. Conviction. The kind that doesn't raise its voice because it doesn't need to.

"Why didn't you call?"

"Battery died," I shrug, pitching it casually even though my shoulders are tight as hell. "Hey, you got a minute to talk?"

"Always."

That word lands heavier than it should.

Norman turns and gestures for me to follow, already moving before I do, like the answer was never in question. We pass through a secured door and into one of the smaller examination rooms tucked behind the labs—less surgical suite, more private workspace. Glass walls with the opacity dialed just low enough to blur silhouettes outside. A long metal table. A chair I've sat in more times than I can count. The door seals shut behind us with a quiet hiss that makes the room feel even smaller.

Norman doesn't sit. He never does when he's worried.

"Take your jacket off," he says, tone even. Then, after a beat, "Shirt too."

I hesitate just long enough to make the silence stretch.

"How'd you know?" I ask, already unzipping the jacket.

"You're not hard to read, son," he replies, matter-of-fact. "The scratches and your posture give you away. That, and the fact you walked in here like you're bracing for impact."

Fair.

I shrug out of the jacket and tug my shirt over my head, the fabric catching briefly on a sore spot along my ribs. I bite back the reaction, but Norman clocks it immediately. His jaw tightens as he steps closer, eyes sharp, cataloging damage like it's second nature. Bruising already blooming dark along my side. Scratches across my chest and shoulder—angry, uneven lines that scream talons more than fists.

He exhales slowly through his nose.

"What in God's name happened back there?" he asks.

"Cat burglar and a rabid angry bird making an appearance," I say. "That's what happened."

Norman's head snaps up. "Toomes was there?" The word comes out rougher than he probably intended. "Is he—"

"No," I cut in quickly. "He wasn't. I thought it was him at first, but no… different one."

He blinks. Once. Processes. "A different one?"

"Yeah." I roll my shoulder experimentally, wince when it pulls. "This Vulture was faster. Red feathers. Metal talons and claws. Meaner build, too. I had a hell of a time keeping up with them."

Norman stares at me like I've just rewritten a chapter of reality he thought he understood. "You're telling me there's another one."

"I'm telling you there's at least another one."

"That's—" He stops himself, scrubs a hand over his face, then looks at me again, all sharp edges and restrained fury. "How did you manage to keep up on foot?"

I glance down at my discarded shirt, then over to my bag sitting against the wall. "I didn't."

I cross the room, crouch, and unzip it, fingers brushing against cracked concrete dust and damp fabric before closing around the familiar shapes. When I turn back, I hold the web shooters up between us.

Norman freezes.

For just a second, the mask slips. Not anger. Not fear. Something closer to awe mixed with dread.

"You got them working?" he asks quietly.

"Last night," I say. "After I stormed out of the lab."

His eyes flick up, sharp. "You went somewhere else."

"Doctor Octavius's lab," I admit. "I needed space. And answers."

Norman doesn't interrupt, which is how I know he's holding himself back.

"There was a guy there at that robbery I stopped the other night. He had this glue-like substance he made. I had a piece of it and decided to analyze it. Turns out, it held the missing key to the web formula I was looking for."

Norman picks one of the shooters up, turning it carefully in his hands like it might bite him. "And you tested this in the field," he says flatly.

"I didn't have a choice."

"You always have a choice," he snaps, then reins it in, voice dropping again. "You chose to engage."

"I chose not to let people die," I counter, heat creeping in despite myself. "I chose not to let a flying psychopath tear through Manhattan unchecked. Even if it was a cat burglar, I didn't want to take a chance considering the last time your penthouse got broke into."

"This cat burglar… who was it?"

"That's not important right now. She did tell me something interesting though." My jaw clenches as I say it. I really hope he wasn't hiding this from me. "Apparently, she broke into the Archives on September twentieth."

"And she wasn't caught?" Norman raises a brow, showing no sign of acknowledgment. "I should speak with Smythe about increasing security there.."

"That's not all… she said a guy in a Jackal mask was there, looking for the same thing she was. And to top it off, that's when the other Vulture showed up and attacked her. Apparently, the Jackal guy is the one controlling them."

"That thing was in the archive?" his fingers clench into fists. "Why didn't Smythe tell me?"

"You had no clue about this?"

"Peter, I swear to you." Norman pauses, taking in a breath. "I had no idea this had happened. Not one bit." His hands drop from fists to his sides, but the tension hasn't left his shoulders. He's trying to process it, trying to reconcile what he thought he knew with what I just dumped on him. His gaze roams over the scratches, the bruises, the tensed muscles that scream fight more than caution.

"You're sure?" I ask, voice low, almost quiet enough that it's me double-checking if I missed something. There's a difference between being certain and hoping you're not about to step into a trap you didn't see coming. Norman meets my eyes, sharp as a blade, and nods once, stiff.

"I'm sure. This… archive incident. The Jackal. That Vulture. None of it was in any of my reports, nothing flagged by security. Smythe didn't know, or he would have told me. I promise you, Peter—if I'd known…" His voice trails off, but it's heavy, weighted with guilt that's more than just parental. It's the kind of responsibility that sits like a brick on your chest when someone you care about walks into danger.

I swallow, trying to keep my own frustration in check. The last thing I need is for this to turn into a yelling match about "why wasn't I told?" Because it won't help anyone. Still, my stomach twists. "So this guy in the Jackal mask, controlling these… experiments, sending Vultures after people… he's been doing this right under your nose?"

Norman steps closer, the angle of his body commanding, but not threatening. It's the kind of presence that makes the air itself feel sharper. "Under my nose? Maybe. But you have to understand, Peter… Oscorp is vast. Security is precise, yes, but it isn't omnipotent. A man with knowledge, with… ability, can slip between the cracks if he's careful. The question is—how much have you uncovered on your own?" His eyes narrow slightly. Not in accusation, but in calculation.

I shift my weight, pulling the shooters closer to my chest.

"Enough to know that this Jackal is the one after my father's research."

"This girl, what's her connection to this? What was she in the archive for?"

"Norman, do you know who Walter Hardy is?" The reaction he gives me is enough. His face drains of color, and I can see his hands tremble at the sight. "How do you know him?"

"Shortly after you came to see me upon waking from your coma, I was approached by someone. They demanded to know where the spider was."

"What?"

"In an effort to keep the spider out of the wrong hands, I hired Walter Hardy to steal the spider from the Oscorp facility it was being kept at. That way, if someone were to go looking for it, they wouldn't be able to have it. The night you were attacked by Toomes, I had tried contacting Walter. He didn't answer. I haven't heard from him since that night, and I've been trying to figure out what had happened."

"You were still keeping stuff from me." I say, narrowing my eyes. "I thought we agreed to be honest with each other."

"Peter, you must understand." Norman takes a step towards me. "Despite my intentions to help you, I have a responsibility to Oscorp. Your father. And most importantly, keeping my employees safe. Walter Hardy was not supposed to be involved with this."

"Well he is, Norman. He's missing, and according to the girl… Jackal has him somewhere."

"This girl… who is she?"

I'm not sure whether to tell him or not. On one hand, if I do… I'm outing Felicia and potentially damaging the little trust we've built. If I don't, I won't be able to help her to the best of my ability. Fuck it, I'm going to have to take a chance here.

"His daughter."

"Felicia?" Norman's eyes widened. "No… it can't be."

"How can't it be?" I ask, throwing my hands up.

"Walter went into retirement to keep Felicia safe. He didn't want to take a chance of putting her in danger. When he helped steal the spider, he was worried his daughter might be put in danger if we were found out." He sighed, placing his face into his hands. "I've put so many people in danger. I am so sorry."

"Don't be sorry." I shake my head, standing up. "I was told once that being sorry doesn't help. Do something about it."

"You're right," Norman composes himself. "What can I do to help?"

"For starters, I'd like that upgrade to my suit you were talking about last night. The undersuit." I shrug. "Secondly, finish patching me up Doc."

"I meant in regards to everything else."

"Find me everything you can on Toomes. I think if I can track him down, I can get a read on where Jackal is. If I'm lucky, we can get to Walter before something bad happens to him."

"I'll speak with Smythe when we're done, find out why I wasn't notified about the attack in the Archive."

"Good. Because I'd like to know as well."

Smythe came off as a creep at times, preferring his machines over humans. Do I like him? Not particularly, but he did help me. I may not like being treated like a variable, or being used as a guinea pig for that matter — but there was a purpose to that. Why wouldn't Smythe tell Norman about the Archive attack?

Is it because he wants to keep Norman out of it? To prove he can handle things without him? I'd like to think that's why. It's cleaner. Easier. But the thought doesn't settle, just keeps circling like it's looking for somewhere worse to land. The adrenaline finally starts to burn off, leaving that hollowed-out feeling behind my eyes. Everything feels heavier. Slower. Two hours of sleep is not going to cut it right now.

Norman gestures toward the table, already pulling on gloves. I sit, muscles protesting as soon as I shift my weight. He works in silence at first, methodical but not detached. This isn't a doctor at work—it's someone taking inventory, making sure all the pieces are still there.

He cleans the scratches on my face first. The antiseptic stings, sharp enough to pull a hiss out of me before I can stop it. Norman notices, of course. He always does. He doesn't comment, just steadies my chin with two fingers and keeps going, careful but firm. The smaller cuts don't look like much, but they burn in that irritating way that refuses to be ignored.

Then his attention moves lower.

The slashes are ugly—angry red lines where talons tore through skin instead of stopping where they should have. Norman's jaw tightens again, just a fraction.

"What happened to your shoulders?" he asks, eyes flicking up to meet mine before dropping back to the damage.

I try not to wince as he disinfects them. I fail.

"He came from behind and pinned me with his talons."

Norman pauses, the bottle hovering in his hand.

"How'd you get free?"

I snort before I can help it. It hurts. Worth it.

"Hit him with a dumpster."

He looks at me over the rim of his glasses, unimpressed.

"A dumpster?"

"Yeah." I grin, lopsided. "Would you believe I wanted him to smell as bad as he looked?"

"I'd say you're enjoying yourself," Norman scoffs, going back to work. "Don't become reckless because you feel invincible. You're not."

"I know."

The words come out automatically, and they're true enough. I know I can bleed. I know I can break. I know that one bad angle, one second too slow, and this all ends differently. What I don't say—what I keep locked behind my teeth—is that when I wear that mask, the world makes sense in a way it never has before. The fear sharpens instead of paralyzing. The noise quiets. I move, and the city moves with me. It's the most alive I've ever felt. Like I finally clicked into place.

I don't say it because he won't understand. Or maybe he'll understand too well.

Norman finishes cleaning the wounds, his touch careful as he applies salve and fresh bandages. The slashes on my chest get reinforced, layered like he's trying to make up for the fact that he can't rewind time. He wraps my shoulders last, adjusting the tension just enough that it supports without constricting. I roll one experimentally. It aches, but it holds.

"Try not to tear these open," he says. "That's not a suggestion."

"Yes, sir."

He gives me a look. I shut up.

When he's done, he strips the gloves off and drops them into the disposal, then finally—finally—sits.

"I'm going to speak with Smythe," he says, already back to business. "Tonight. Whatever reason he had for keeping this from me, I want to hear it from him directly."

"Good," I say. "Because I'd like to know as well."

He nods, then gestures toward the jacket draped over the chair. "Leave that here. We'll patch it up. Add the extra armor we discussed. The undersuit will be finished by tomorrow."

"Tomorrow?" I arch a brow. "You work fast."

"I don't sleep much," he replies dryly.

Fair.

I slide off the table, moving slower now. The room feels warmer than it did earlier, or maybe that's just the exhaustion finally catching up. I grab my bag, slinging it over my shoulder, then pause.

"Thanks, Norman," I say. I mean it. "I really do."

He looks at me for a long moment, something unreadable passing behind his eyes. Then he nods. "Get some rest, Peter. We'll need you thinking clearly."

I head for the door, the quiet hiss of it opening sounding louder than before. As I step out into the hall, the building hums around me again, indifferent and vast. My body feels held together with tape and stubbornness, but it's enough. It has to be.

As I make my way back toward the elevator, one thought keeps slipping through the cracks, no matter how hard I try to ignore it. Somewhere out there, Walter Hardy is still missing. Somewhere dark and hidden and wrong. I don't know where he is. I don't know what's been done to him.

I just hope he's still holding on.




Meanwhile...



The lab was quiet in the way only underground places ever were—no windows, no sense of time, just the constant, low hum of machinery breathing somewhere deep in the walls. Stainless steel counters gleamed under cold fluorescent lights, scattered with instruments that looked less like tools and more like intentions. Jackal moved through it without hurry, hands clasped behind his back, boots clicking softly against the polished floor as though the building itself were listening for him.

He passed containment tanks, sealed rooms, reinforced doors marked with warnings no one ever intended to obey. Every so often, something inside the walls shifted or thudded, a reminder that the word lab was doing a lot of heavy lifting down here. Jackal didn't look at any of it for long. None of it mattered yet.

At the far end of the lab, past a security door that slid open at his approach, the light thinned. The corridor beyond was narrow and deliberately underlit, the bulbs recessed high above, casting long shadows that swallowed the floor. This was where the experiments that didn't behave were kept. The ones that screamed. The ones that broke.

Jackal walked slowly, savoring the echo of his footsteps.

The cell at the end of the hall was occupied.

Walter Hardy barely looked like the man he'd once been. He sat slumped against the back wall, wrists shackled above his head, chains rattling softly as his chest rose and fell in shallow, uneven breaths. His face was swollen, split in more than one place, dried blood flaking against his skin. One eye was nearly swollen shut. His clothes hung off him in tatters, the fabric dark with old stains that hadn't been cleaned in days. Weeks. The smell of antiseptic barely masked the copper beneath it.

But when Jackal stopped in front of the cell, Walter lifted his head.

His eyes were still sharp.

Contempt burned in them, bright and stubborn, even as his body trembled from exhaustion. It was the only part of him that hadn't been taken yet.

"How are we feeling, Walter?" Jackal asked pleasantly. "You don't look too well."

Walter dragged in a breath that turned into a cough halfway through. His shoulders shook as he fought it down, chains clinking softly. "Go—go to hell," he rasped.

Jackal smiled beneath the mask. "I come in peace," he said. "I have news for you."

He reached to the side, unfolded a metal chair, and dragged it across the concrete floor, the screeching sound echoing down the corridor like a warning. He set it just outside the cell and sat, crossing one leg over the other, posture relaxed, patient.

"Your daughter is following in your footsteps."

The words landed wrong. Not like a blow—worse. They slipped past the pain, past the exhaustion, straight into something still alive inside Walter.

His head snapped up.

"…Felicia?" The name came out broken. "You—" His breathing hitched. "You don't get to say her name."

Jackal tilted his head. "Oh, but I do. She's quite talented. Slippery. Clever. Resourceful." He leaned forward slightly. "Just like her father."

Walter's hands clenched into fists, chains biting into his wrists.

"She's not a part of this," he said, voice shaking.

Jackal chuckled softly.

"Oh, but isn't she?" He tapped a finger against the arm of the chair. "Funny thing about footsteps, Walter. They're easy to follow. Especially when someone doesn't realize they're leaving them behind."

Walter swallowed hard. His chest heaved. Weeks of isolation, pain, and degradation had worn him down to something fragile, something frayed. But this—this was different. This reached into him and twisted.

"What do you want?" he growled.

"I want you to understand," Jackal replied calmly. "This isn't punishment. It's progression. You had your time. Your legend. Your careful little retirement." He gestured vaguely at the cell. "And now… the next chapter."

Walter shook his head, a harsh, broken sound escaping him. "She has nothing to do with this."

"Ah." Jackal leaned back. "But she does. Because Jimmy has noticed her."

The name hit like ice.

Walter's breath caught in his throat, eyes widening despite himself. Fear—real fear—flickered there, raw and unguarded.

"No," he whispered. "Not him."

Jackal's voice softened, almost sympathetic.

"You remember Jimmy? Red feathers. Metal talons. So very enthusiastic." He smiled. "He was the one who brought you to me, after all."

Walter's body tensed violently, muscles screaming in protest as he pulled against the chains. Memories flashed behind his eyes—wings blotting out the light, claws digging in, the sound of air tearing apart as he was lifted screaming into the sky.

"If Jimmy has his way," Jackal continued, conversational, "he'll deal with her personally. He's been itching for another test. Something… hands-on."

Rage surged up through the fear, hot and desperate. Walter roared, voice cracking as he yanked at the restraints.

"You leave her alone! You hear me?! She's not part of this!"

Jackal stood, unhurried.

"Oh, Walter. It's only a matter of time before you're reunited. Father and daughter. A touching moment." He stepped closer to the bars, his shadow stretching over Walter's broken form. "But if Jimmy is involved… well. I wouldn't expect miracles."

Walter's strength finally broke through the pain. He slammed himself forward, chains rattling violently, screaming until his throat burned.

"STAY AWAY FROM MY DAUGHTER!"

Jackal turned away, already walking back down the corridor.

"YOU HEAR ME?!" Walter screamed after him, voice shredded, desperate, furious, alive in a way he hadn't been in weeks. "STAY AWAY FROM HER!"

The echoes chased Jackal down the hall, fading slowly, leaving Walter alone in the dark—with nothing but the sound of his own breathing and the crushing realization that everything he'd tried to protect was slipping through his fingers.




AN: Hello everybody, how are you doing? So, I did a little bit of work on the story and figured out the timeline of events. It did require me to go through and do some minor edits to get everything lined up, but I should be good now. In a shocking turn of events, the overall story of Absolute Spider-Man has occurred over the course of 5 weeks. Mind you, this is accounting for Chapters 35-43 at least, as I am working on 43 currently. Normally I stay five chapters ahead, but I'll be honest, I got hit with the writing bug the other night and wrote out 4 whole chapters in the course of a day. In that case, I generally would post another chapter to keep up. The chapters that I wrote are some major ones in term of events. So rather than dropping them all at once, I intend on doing it sporadically over the next couple weeks. This will be the first chapter over the next three to four weeks that is dropped.

We are approximately in the last 10-15 percent of the Vulture arc, roughly. Until I know exactly how many chapters this rounds out to, that number is probably wrong! But yeah, I am actively trying to get the Vulture arc resolved by the end of February, even if the chapters are not released publicly by then. (I'd like to. Just depends on how things roll going forward)




Official timeline of Absolute Spider-Man:




SI's Universe:

June 6th, 2025: SI dies in a car wreck on the way to work




Absolute universe:

August 12th, 2024: Peter is bitten by the spider and falls into a three week coma.
September 2-8 (Chapters 1-7)
September 9-14 (Chapters 8-13)
September 16-20 (Chapters 14-22)
September 24 (Chapter 23)
September 25-October 6 (Chapters 24-26)
October 7 (Chapters 27-30)
October 8 (Chapters 31-37)
October 9 (Chapter 38-current)



That being said, some of the more formal complaints made about this story regarding Peter's powers and seeming weak, when put into perspective with this timeline makes things seem a little funnier in that regard. SI Peter has been awake from the coma for 5 weeks. So, in the span of a little over a month, Peter has gone from being in a coma to being Spider-Man now. He only had 15 days with May before she was killed. In 5 weeks, he's fought Adrian Toomes' Vulture, Shocker, and now Jimmy Natale's Vulture (yes, that's the Red Vulture). 10 days is what it took in-story for Peter's powers to be fully emerged without the addition of the web shooters.

It's funny to think that's all occurred in that timespan, but that is how it's gone down.

Onto more important things, though:

The next arc will be the Morbius and Hammerhead storyline. Morbius will be the biggest threat in the storyline, with Hammerhead acting as a secondary antagonist. Very excited to show that off when the time comes.

I will attempt to get another chapter or two out this week.

Please let me know what you guys think, it does help motivate me to keep writing!

Want to see more? I do have a Patreon where you can get up to 5 chapters early access and get to see artwork commissions I've gotten for the story, as well as first looks at original projects I have in the works. (Same username: Arsenal597)

Join my discord server where you can talk about the story. Link will be below!

I'll catch you guys later!


This story is cross-posted on Ao3, FF, and QQ.


discord. gg /dQkeJPkxdD
https://www.patreon.com/c/Arsenal597
 
Man the mutagenic vampire Moribus bitter by radioactive bat examining Spider-Man blood and Hammer head as his accomplice , which I'm speculating here how that senario might occur in the absolute Spider verse. Joining the fray. Since Moribus has a blood disease here too.
Although, Wondering how Spider-Man going to save Walter Hardy from Jackal clutches as Spider-Man dealing Jackal dealing with his genetic Metahuman problems. Till February on how Spider-Man resolved on how to deal with the Vulture Adrian Toomes and Jackal once and for all.?
Continue on
Cheers!
.
 
This story is pretty good at suspense. Everything being slightly off is interesting. It is like a mix of normal universe and just as off-kilter as the recent Spider-Man TV Show Disney put out.
 
Chapter 35: The Devil or Spider? New
DISCLAIMER: THIS STORY IS NOT, HAS NOT, AND NEVER WILL BE WRITTEN WITH AI.



Earlier that morning…


A few hours before the break-in at the Osborn Penthouse, Ben Parker stood outside the Daily Bugle and took a moment to steady himself.

The building hadn't changed much. Same brick exterior, same tall windows stacked like watchful eyes, same faint vibration humming through the glass as if the place was constantly on the brink of tearing itself apart. It felt alive in a way most buildings didn't. Loud. Hungry. Always chasing the next story before it slipped through its fingers.

Ben adjusted the strap of his bag on his shoulder and exhaled slowly. For a brief second, the city noise faded, replaced by memory. He could still picture the Bugle when it had been smaller—scrappier. When it had been just another office, not the beating heart of New York's media machine.

The moment he stepped through the door, it hit him all at once. Phones ringing from every direction, keyboards clacking in uneven rhythms, voices overlapping — arguing, laughing, shouting across desks without bothering to lower their volume. Papers fluttering from printers, slapped down onto desks, snatched up mid-sentence. It was a lot to absorb.

Someone nearly collided with him while walking backward, too focused on a tablet to notice another human being existed. Ben sidestepped just in time, earning a distracted apology that was already forgotten by the time it was spoken.

There was a time—God, it feels like another lifetime—when Jonah Jameson was just the loud kid in the school newsroom. Always hunched over typewriters and early computers, sleeves rolled up, barking orders at people who technically didn't have to listen to him. Even back then, Jonah had presence. Not authority exactly, not yet—but conviction. The kind that made you believe the story mattered because he believed it did.

Ben smiled at the memory. Some things never changed.

He stepped farther in, weaving between desks, careful not to get clipped by a rolling chair or an overenthusiastic intern sprinting toward the coffee machine like it was a matter of national security.

At the desk outside Jameson's office sat Betty Brant, phone cradled between her shoulder and ear as she typed with one hand and flipped through a folder with the other. She looked up the instant Ben approached, sharp eyes clocking him from a mile away.

"Can I help you?" she asked, warm but professional.

"Hi, I'm here to see Mr. Jameson," he nodded.

"Is he expecting you?"

"Yes. We're old friends and asked me to stop by for an interview."

Betty's eyes flicked over him for a moment.

"Did he say when?" her eyebrow lifted a touch.

"He suggested it was before noon."

That got a small, genuine smile out of her despite herself. She glanced toward the glass-walled office at the corner of the room behind her—the one with the blinds half-open and the unmistakable shape of a man pacing back and forth behind them.

"I'll see if he's rea-"

She doesn't get a chance to finish, as the door to Jonah's office swings open hard enough to rattle the glass, the noise in the newsroom dipping in unison. The one constant between the school newsroom and the Daily Bugle, it seemed, was that when Jonah appeared, all attention was on him.

Jonah stepped out mid-sentence, waving a stack of papers like a weapon.

"I don't care if the source 'felt weird about it,' Robbie. If we can verify it, we run—"

He stopped short as his eyes fell upon Ben's figure. The stack of papers in hand lowered, his scowl evaporated, replaced by something rare and disarming: genuine delight.

For a split second, J. Jonah Jameson doesn't look like the editor-in-chief of the Daily Bugle. He looked like a man who'd just been handed a piece of his past that he'd nearly forgotten about.

"Ben Parker… long time no see."

Jonah gestured with two fingers toward his office, already turning on his heel like he assumed Ben would follow—which, of course, he did. The glass door shut behind them with a solid thunk, muting the chaos of the newsroom to a distant, ever-present hum. Inside, the office was controlled clutter: framed front pages on the walls, shelves sagging under the weight of books and binders, a desk that looked like it hadn't been truly clean since the Clinton administration but somehow functioned perfectly anyway.

Jonah didn't bother sitting right away. He set the stack of papers down, straightened a frame that didn't actually need straightening, then finally leaned back against the edge of his desk and crossed his arms.

"How long has it been?" Jonah asked. "Five years?"

Ben let out a soft laugh as he set his bag down by the chair. "Ten. I believe it was for your son's graduation party."

Jonah blinked, then snapped his fingers once. "Right, right. God. Ten years." He shook his head, a wry smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.

"Feels like yesterday."

He exhaled, some of the bluster draining out of him, replaced by something quieter. More personal.

"I'm sorry I didn't reach out sooner about May," Jonah said. "I was out of town. Only found out a few hours before I called you."

Ben waved it off gently. "It's alright."

But Jonah didn't let it go immediately. He watched Ben for a second longer, eyes sharp but not probing—more like taking inventory. Making sure the man in front of him was real, still standing.

"How are you doing?" Jonah asked. "Peter holding up okay?"

Ben took the chair across from Jonah's desk, easing into it like his bones remembered the weight of the world a little too well. "He's… trying. Some days are better than others. He keeps busy. Probably too busy, if I'm being honest."

Jonah huffed. "Runs in the family."

That earned a small smile from Ben.

Jonah finally sat, lowering himself into his chair and folding his hands together on the desk. When he spoke again, his voice was steadier—measured in a way that suggested he wasn't just making conversation for the sake of it.

"You did good by that kid," Jonah said. "May too. People forget that kind of thing matters. They shouldn't."

Ben looked down for a moment, nodding once. "She would've liked hearing that."

"Yeah," Jonah said quietly. "She would have."

There was a brief silence—not awkward, just heavy with shared history. Jonah broke it first, because of course he did.

"So," he said, straightening a little. "You look older."

Ben snorted. "You look louder."

Jonah grinned. "Occupational hazard."

He leaned back, chair creaking in protest. "You know, when we were kids, I thought journalism was about chasing stories. Big ones. Scandals. Exposés. I wanted my name on the front page so badly I could taste the ink." He paused, glancing at one of the framed headlines on the wall. "Turns out, the longer you do this, the more you realize it's about knowing when not to run something."

Ben raised an eyebrow. "That's not exactly the Jonah Jameson reputation."

Jonah waved a dismissive hand. "Let them think what they want. I don't owe the public my personality. I owe them the truth."

Ben shifted slightly in his chair, studying his old friend with renewed interest.

"You still believe that?" Ben asked.

"With everything I've got," Jonah said immediately. "The city's loud. Everyone's got an angle. A megaphone. Half the job is filtering out the noise so the facts don't get trampled." He tapped the desk once for emphasis. "I don't hate people for no reason, Ben. I hate liars. I hate cowards. I hate anyone who treats the truth like it's optional."

Ben smiled faintly. "That part hasn't changed either."

"Nope," Jonah said. "Just learned to aim it better."

He leaned forward now, elbows on the desk.

"That's why I wanted to talk to you. Not just because we're old friends. Because you're steady. You always were. When things get complicated, I trust your read."

Ben's expression softened at that.

"You could've just said you missed me."

"Don't push it," Jonah shot back, but there was no heat in it.

Jonah didn't sit back down right away. Instead, he moved around the desk, tugged the door closed a little farther until the newsroom noise dulled another notch, then finally took his chair and angled it just enough to face Ben directly. The smile lingered, but it shifted—less nostalgic now, more evaluative.

"Alright," Jonah said, clasping his hands together. "Let's not pretend this is just two old men catching up."

Ben gave a quiet chuckle.

"Wouldn't dream of it."

Jonah nodded once, satisfied.

"Good. Because I didn't bring you in here for a favor." He leaned forward slightly. "I brought you in because I think you can do the job."

Jonah held Ben's gaze for a long moment after that, eyes sharp but not unkind. This was the part where most people expected bluster or theatrics. Instead, Jonah just sighed and leaned back in his chair.

"I've asked you before," he said. "More than once." He tilted his head slightly. "And every time, you found a reason to say no."

Ben huffed softly. "You make it sound like I was dodging you."

"You were," Jonah shot back. "Just politely."

Ben didn't argue. There was no point. Jonah wasn't wrong.

"I gotta know," Jonah continued, folding his hands together on the desk. "What makes this time any different? Why'd you finally say yes to my offer?"

Ben stared at the scuffed edge of the desk for a second longer than necessary. The words didn't come easy, not because he didn't know them, but because saying them out loud made everything feel real in a way he'd been avoiding.

"To be frank," Ben said quietly, "I think I'm losing my mind sitting at home right now." He glanced up briefly, then back down. "Without May there… it's impossible to stay sane. Every room feels louder when it's empty. Every day stretches too long." He swallowed. "I want to do something meaningful. Something Peter can be proud of."

Jonah didn't interrupt. He didn't crack a joke or soften it with humor. He just listened, jaw set, eyes steady.

"You always were terrible at standing still," Jonah said after a moment.

Ben smiled faintly. "Guess that never changed."

Jonah tapped a finger against the desk, once. "You didn't take the job before because you didn't want a handout."

Ben looked up. "It wasn't that simple."

"It never is," Jonah said. "But you hated the idea of me doing you a favor."

"I still do."

Jonah smirked. "Good. Means you won't owe me anything."

The smirk faded as Jonah's expression shifted, turning more serious again. "I tried asking around after… everything." He hesitated, just enough to be noticeable. "About that night. Couldn't get a straight answer out of anyone. All I got was 'a horrible accident' and 'wrong place, wrong time.'" His eyes narrowed slightly. "Nearly took Peter's life too, from what I heard."

Ben's shoulders stiffened. He hadn't realized how tightly he'd been holding himself together until that moment.

"What happened that night?" Jonah asked gently. Not as an editor. As a friend.

Ben drew in a slow breath. "Something broke in," he said. "Peter tried to stop it. He didn't hesitate. Never does." His voice wavered, just barely, then steadied again. "May got in the way. I couldn't do anything then."

The room felt smaller all of a sudden.

"Here," Ben added, lifting his eyes to meet Jonah's, "I can."

Jonah frowned. "Something broke in?"

"I don't know how to explain it," Ben admitted. "Looked like one of those mutants you hear about nowadays. Half-man, half-vulture. Wingspan like you wouldn't believe." He shook his head slowly. "Didn't look like something that belonged in this world."

"Jesus," Jonah muttered, swallowing hard.

For a few seconds, neither of them spoke. The hum of the newsroom filtered faintly through the glass, a reminder that the world hadn't paused just because theirs had cracked open.

Jonah broke the silence first, because that was what he did.

"You know," he said, quieter now, "people like to pretend monsters are a metaphor. Easier that way. Makes it feel manageable." He leaned forward slightly. "But monsters are real, Ben. They always have been. Sometimes they wear suits. Sometimes they wear masks. Sometimes they've got wings."

Ben watched him closely. "You believe me."

"I believe you wouldn't lie about something like that," Jonah said without hesitation. "And I believe the city's only going to get weirder from here."

He sat back, rolling his shoulders once like he was settling into a decision that had already been made.

"That's why I don't need another loud voice," Jonah said. "I've got plenty of those. What I need is someone who knows when to shut up and listen. Someone who understands the cost of getting it wrong."

Ben's brow furrowed slightly. "Jonah—"

"I'm not done," Jonah cut in, but there was no bite to it. "I want you here. Not as a favor. Not because you're hurting. But because you're steady when things go sideways."

He gestured vaguely at the walls, at the city beyond them. "Stories are about to break that people aren't ready for. Things that won't paint anyone in a clean light. And when that happens, I want someone at my side who isn't chasing clout or cover."

Ben sat a little straighter. "You're asking a lot."

"I know," Jonah said. "That's why I'm asking you."

He leaned forward, eyes intense now, voice firm. "I want you as my right-hand man. Help me decide what runs and how. Help tell the stories people need to hear—whether they like it or not. Whether it makes heroes or villains out of anyone involved."

Ben studied him for a long moment. The bluster. The conviction. The same fire that had been there all those years ago, sharpened instead of dulled by time.

"You don't care who it upsets," Ben said.

"I care if it's true," Jonah replied. "Everything else is noise."

Ben exhaled slowly, noticing for the first time in a while, the weight on his chest didn't feel quite so suffocating.

"Alright," Ben said at last. "Let's tell the truth."

Jonah smiled.

"I've waited a long time to hear those words come out of your mouth."

"How about we discuss benefits?" Ben grinned right back.






Jonah didn't waste time once the decision had been made. He pushed back from his desk, clapped his hands once like he was resetting the room, and motioned Ben toward the door.

"Come on," he said. "If you're gonna be my right hand, you should know where everything bleeds."

They stepped back out into the newsroom, the noise crashing over them again like surf against rock. Phones rang, someone swore at a printer, a debate about a headline escalated three desks over. Ben felt it immediately—the momentum, the pressure. This place didn't pause for anyone, and it didn't apologize for it either.

Jonah walked with purpose, pointing things out as they went. "Copy desk," he barked, gesturing with his coffee mug. "They save us from ourselves more often than not. Metro's over there. Investigative's in the back—quiet on purpose. If they're loud, something's already gone wrong."

A tall man with graying hair looked up from a desk stacked with papers and gave Jonah a look that said he'd been in the middle of something important. Jonah waved it off.

"Robbie," Jonah said. "Got a second."

Robbie Robertson stood, extending a hand toward Ben without hesitation. His grip was firm, eyes kind but assessing.

"You must be Ben Parker."

"That obvious?" Ben said.

Robbie smiled. "Jonah doesn't light up like that for many people."

"That's hurtful," Jonah muttered.

Robbie chuckled. "Welcome to the Bugle. We could use someone with your reputation."

Ben blinked. "My reputation?"

Robbie's smile softened. "Steady. Honest. Doesn't flinch when things get ugly."

Ben felt a strange tightening in his chest at that, nodded once, and followed Jonah again before he could dwell on it.

They made their way past another cluster of desks, where a man with sharp eyes and a permanent look of curiosity glanced up from a corkboard layered with photos and notes.

"Urich," Jonah said. "This is Ben Parker."

Ben Urich straightened immediately.

"The Ben Parker?"

Ben sighed.

"I really hope there aren't multiple."

"Jonah's spoken very highly of you." Urich grinned back.

Ben shook Urich's hand, noting the ink stains on his fingers, the way his eyes kept flicking back to the board like it might rearrange itself if he stopped watching. This one lived in the details. The dangerous kind.

"I hear you're trouble," Ben said.

Urich shrugged.

"Only for people who lie."

Jonah clapped Ben on the shoulder.

"You're gonna fit in just fine."

Eventually, Jonah steered them toward the breakroom, a smaller space that smelled like burnt coffee and desperation. Jonah poured two mugs without asking, handed one over, and leaned against the counter with a tired sigh that felt heavier than the rest of him.

"You know," Jonah said, staring into his cup, "there is one story that's been catching eyes the last couple of weeks." He glanced sideways at Ben. "I've found myself pulled in as well."

Ben raised an eyebrow.

"Really? What is it?"

Jonah took a sip, grimaced. "There's been a report of a vigilante showing up the last couple weeks. At first, the reports indicated it might've been a resurgence of the Hell's Kitchen vigilante sightings. Same neighborhoods. Same timeframes." He shook his head. "But the violence was different. Less focused. The brutality was beyond anything coming out of Hell's Kitchen. Some of the men and women placed into the hospitals were lucky to survive."

Something cold settled in Ben's stomach, but he kept his face neutral. He'd learned that trick a long time ago.

"But it's a different guy, right?" Ben asked.

"That's what I was focusing on when you arrived," Jonah said. "Urich talked to someone who witnessed a robbery last night. Apparently, our new vigilante was there, with a brand new outfit. Got a big white spider logo plastered on his chest like he's some kind of superhero."

Ben nearly choked on his coffee. He managed not to, but only barely. Somewhere deep in his chest, he cursed—quietly, instinctively, the way you did when you saw a crack forming in something you'd hoped would hold.

"A spider, huh?" he said.

Jonah nodded. "Put a few in the hospital, but nobody was in critical condition that time. Official word is the Mayor's task force, alongside a bounty hunter, intercepted the robbers and captured them." He snorted. "But we've got photos to prove otherwise."

"That's putting a thorn in the Mayor's side," Ben said carefully.

"Mayor Fisk might like the optics of being New York's savior," Jonah replied, "but he needs to stop pretending these vigilantes aren't here."

Ben stared into his coffee, watching the surface ripple slightly. "This Spider guy," he said, "what's your take on him?"

Jonah didn't answer right away. He thought about it, really thought about it, and Ben could see the journalist in him weighing facts against fear.

"He's a super-powered masked man going around assaulting criminals," Jonah said finally. "If it weren't for the fact he seems to be saving people in danger, I'd say he needs to be prosecuted."

Ben glanced up.

"That almost sounds like approval."

Jonah scoffed.

"Approval? No." He sighed, rubbing a hand over his face. "Regardless of whether I like the idea of masked vigilantes running around or not, they appear to be a positive influence when they stick around. As long as they're helping the police, and not acting as judge, jury, and executioner… then I'll keep my nose out of it."

Ben nodded slowly.

"They make a difference," Jonah continued. "The ones that actively put the fine people of New York in danger? That's the kind of miscreant I can't stand."

Ben felt that unease again, deeper this time.

Jonah kept talking, something about optics and timing and how stories had a way of detonating when you least expected them, but Ben wasn't really hearing him anymore.

Movement caught his eye.

At first, he thought it was just a trick of the light—one of those reflections that slid across the glass when traffic shifted below. Then it happened again. Faster. Deliberate.

Ben stepped closer to the window, coffee forgotten in his hand.

Outside, high above the street, a woman in black ran along the side of the building like gravity was a suggestion rather than a rule. She moved with practiced ease, boots striking glass and steel in quick, precise steps before she pushed off and vanished from view.

Ben's breath caught.

A heartbeat later, something followed.

A figure swung through the open air, arcing between buildings on a single white line that snapped taut and reeled him forward with impossible speed. Red and blue flashed in the sunlight. A white spider stretched across his chest, stark and unmistakable.

Ben's stomach dropped.

Peter… what the hell are you doing? You're supposed to be in school.

His jaw tightened, teeth grinding together as the figure disappeared past the edge of the window, chasing the woman with reckless momentum.

Jonah's voice trailed off behind him.

"Ben?"

He didn't answer. Couldn't. His pulse thundered in his ears, every parental instinct screaming at once—fear, pride, anger, all colliding in his chest with nowhere to go.

Then the air outside shifted.

A shadow crossed the window, heavier than the others. Slower, but no less wrong.

Ben's eyes widened as a shape emerged from between the buildings, wings unfurling with a metallic rasp that carried even through the glass. Red feathers catching the light in sharp, violent flashes. Talons curled and flexed, scraping against concrete as the creature banked hard, angling after the two figures ahead.

It looked like the Vulture… but that wasn't the one who took May from him.

The thing screeched, the sound muffled but still piercing, and surged forward with a brutal burst of speed that made his stomach lurch.

"What the hell?" Ben breathed.

Jonah was at his side now, staring out the window, his earlier composure gone. "That's not—" He stopped himself, swallowing hard. "That's not one of the usual reports."





Morning came to Matt Murdock the way it always did now—quiet, heavy, and unwelcome.

He woke on his back, staring at nothing, the city's distant noise filtering in through cracked windows and thin walls. Sirens far away. Footsteps above him. A radiator ticking like it was counting down something important. His breath hitched as he shifted, a sharp reminder blooming along his side.

Matt sat up slowly, fingers pressing against a bruise hidden beneath thin fabric. He winced, not loudly—just enough to acknowledge the pain existed. It always did. The ache was old, familiar, stitched into him like muscle memory. A cross hung loosely around his neck, cool against his chest, its chain twisted from where he'd slept.

He stayed there a moment longer than necessary, listening. The apartment was empty. No heartbeat but his own. No second set of footsteps. No reason to stay in bed.

Eventually, he swung his legs over the side and stood.

Pants came on first. Movements careful, practiced. The kind of economy you learn when your body remembers things you'd rather it forget. He padded barefoot into the kitchen, the floorboards creaking under his weight. The apartment was modest—borderline spartan—but clean. Intentional. Everything had its place, even if that place felt temporary.

Matt cracked eggs into a pan, the sizzle sharp in the quiet. He turned on the television, not to watch—never to watch—but to listen. The anchor's voice cut through the room, crisp and rehearsed, talking about crime statistics and public safety initiatives. Mayor Fisk's task force. Increased patrols. A city supposedly getting safer.

Matt didn't smile.

He ate standing up, chewing slowly, letting the noise wash over him without really sinking in. He could hear the lie under the words. The pauses where information was sanded smooth. The way truth got bent into something easier to swallow.

After breakfast, he cleaned up, dried his hands, and went back to the bedroom to dress properly. Shirt. Tie. Collar. He moved with the quiet certainty of ritual, the familiar comfort of routine grounding him.

His phone buzzed on the nightstand.

Once.

Then again.

He tilted his head, listening to the screen light up.

"Foggy."

A pause.

"Foggy."

Another pause.

Matt sighed, already smiling despite himself, and crossed the room. He picked the phone up and answered.

"Hey, Foggy," he said. "You're up early."

"Well, I couldn't sleep," Foggy Nelson replied, voice already halfway into a grin. "Heard they finally caught the Shocker last night."

Matt stilled, one hand resting on the edge of the dresser. "Shocker? Foggy, I thought you weren't getting involved with those cases anymore."

"I'm not!" Foggy said quickly. "Some of my connections told me he was apprehended last night. Apparently that new guy in the red mask beat the shit out of him." Foggy lowered his voice conspiratorially. "Though, according to the Mayor's office and the Task Force, it was them that apprehended Shocker and his crew."

Matt exhaled through his nose. "Of course it was."

"I'm telling you," Foggy pressed on, excitement bleeding through, "it's gotta be the Devil."

Matt's jaw tightened just a fraction. "We're back on that? Foggy, the 'Devil' was a rumor. A story to scare people into behaving. He never existed."

"Well, just because you don't believe in him doesn't mean I can't."

Matt snorted softly. "Believing in the Devil? That's funny. I see what you did there."

"Oh, come on," Foggy groaned. "I wasn't trying to make a religious joke."

"If you wish to repent," Matt said lightly, "there's always a confessional booth available."

"My sins are too vast to list, Matty boy," Foggy replied. Then his voice softened. "Anyway, Karen says hi. She misses you. And… I do too."

Something tightened in Matt's chest—not pain, exactly. Just pressure.

"I miss you guys as well," Matt said. "It's not like I haven't offered to have the two of you over for dinner."

"You know what we mean," Foggy said gently. "Around the office."

"I know, Foggy."

A beat passed.

"Anyway," Foggy continued, clearing his throat, "just calling to see if we were still on for lunch today."

"Of course," Matt said. "I wouldn't miss it for the world."

"Alright, buddy. I'll see you then."

"See you then."

The call ended, the silence rushing back in to fill the space it left behind.

Matt set the phone down and adjusted his collar, fingers lingering there for a moment. He turned toward the closet as he reached for his jacket—and stopped.

His head tilted.

He hadn't meant to open it. Not today.

But his hand moved anyway.

The door creaked softly as it swung open, revealing the mannequin head tucked neatly on the shelf inside. The red cowl rested there, smooth and unmistakable even without sight. The horns. The shape. The weight of everything it represented.

Matt's lip curled, just barely.

"The Devil's dead and buried, Foggy," he murmured to the empty room. "He's not coming back."

He closed the closet door and walked out of the apartment without looking back, the city swallowing him whole as the door clicked shut behind him.





There will be no AN's for the next couple chapters. I am happy to be writing, but this story in recent days has gotten a lot of AI/ChatGPT allegations, whether it has been in a DM, comment on FF or Ao3. I have commented on this before, but as you saw at the beginning of the chapter... I put a disclaimer. I will keep on doing that from now on. If the comments keep happening, I will put the story on pause. I've said in prior chapters that seeing reviews and comments give motivation to write. That is true. However, seeing people claim I'm using AI makes it hard to have the will to write for this.

If it happens, I apologize for those who have been reading it and want to see more. But for now, I still plan on releasing three more chapters this weekend.
 
Chapter 36: Matthew and Elektra New
DISCLAIMER: THIS STORY IS NOT, HAS NOT, AND NEVER WILL BE WRITTEN WITH AI.

My head hurt as I walked into school just in time for fourth period. Hopefully, with a bit of luck there wasn't any footage floating around of me fighting the Red Vulture. The last thing I wanted was for Ben to get wind of it and have a heart attack. I was going to get in trouble for skipping class, but I could handle a few extra detentions.

If I was going to be honest, I'd only ever had detention one time and that was for a fight I got into. It was the fourth grade. It wasn't even worth calling a fight — he more or less slapped me, and I managed to bust his lip open without using a fist. Only hit him like two or three times, but I didn't remember using a fist.

That was about the most action I'd gotten myself into, given the fact I wouldn't get into another altercation until I was fourteen. I genuinely hadn't been a fighter throughout my life. Uh, where the hell was I going with this?

Oh, right. I could handle detention for a good cause. Making sure that the ones I cared about were safe was definitely worth it.

The halls felt louder than usual. Not in a literal sense—just that buzzing awareness that came with being sore, underslept, and about ninety percent sure my face looked like I'd lost a fight with a weed whacker. Every step sent a dull throb up my skull, and I kept my head down as I made my way to class, backpack slung over one shoulder like nothing was wrong. The bell rang right as I slid into my seat. Close enough to count.

Class went by in a blur. I knew the teacher talked. I knew there were notes on the board. I couldn't have told you a single thing that was written. I spent most of the period staring at the edge of my desk, tracing old gouges in the wood with my thumb, trying not to think about talons scraping across brick or the way my shoulder still felt wrong when I moved it too fast. Every now and then, I caught someone looking at me. Not staring—just that quick double take, eyes flicking to my face and then away like they'd already decided not to ask.

The scratches didn't help. Felicia hadn't held back. Thin red lines crossed my cheek and jaw, some already scabbed over, others still angry-looking enough to invite questions. I considered pulling my hoodie up, but that would've just made it worse. Nothing said "ask me about my mysterious injuries" like suddenly hiding your face in class.

By the time the bell rang, it felt like I'd blinked and lost forty-five minutes of my life. I packed up, moved with the flow of bodies into the hall, and let myself get carried to lunch on autopilot. The cafeteria smelled like grease and overcooked pizza, just like always. It was comforting in a weird way. Some constants were nice.

I grabbed a tray, sat down, and barely got two bites in before a shadow fell across the table. I didn't have to look up to know who it was.

"What the hell happened to your face?"

I sighed through my nose and glanced up at Flash. He was standing there with his tray half-tilted, brow furrowed in a way that was almost… concerned. I still wasn't used to seeing that side of him.

"Cat," I said. "Stuck in a tree."

Flash stared at me for a second, deadpan. "Jesus, that's about as believable as Osborn being poor."

"Well," I shrugged, poking at my food, "there was a cat."

He snorted, shaking his head, and sat across from me anyway. There was a beat of silence where we just ate, and for a moment I thought that was going to be it. Then Flash reached into his pocket and pulled his phone out, his expression shifting. Less joking. More… careful.

"Hey," he said, slower now. "I remember you talking about that thing that—" He stopped himself, jaw tightening. "That killed May. You said it was like a Vulture, right?"

My stomach sank.

"Yeah. Why?"

"Check this out."

He turned the phone toward me. The video was shaky, filmed from across the street, but it was clear enough. Red feathers cut across the sky. Wings beat hard, brutal, nothing graceful about it. And then the other figure swung into frame—red mask, white spider stretched across his chest. I should've known somebody would've gotten footage of our scuffle.

The fight was fast. Violent. Blurry fists and snapping wings.

Flash watched my face instead of the screen.

"That the same thing?"

"No," I said after a second, shaking my head. "The other one had almost black feathers. Green if the light hit it right."

"So there's more than one?" He let out a breath. "What the hell is going on nowadays?"

"I'd been asking myself that for a while now," I muttered. "I mean, winged man-vultures, vigilantes in red masks, and Flash Thompson quitting sports. It's like the world's gone mad."

"Now that is a low blow, Parker," Flash said, but he was smiling.

"I've got a few years' worth of jabs to get you back for, remember?"

"Touche."

He pocketed his phone, and the tension eased, just a little. We ate in relative silence after that, the kind that didn't feel awkward. One by one, more people started filling in around us, voices rising, trays clattering. I didn't really pay attention to who sat where.

The noise around us settled into something almost comfortable as lunch kept rolling on, conversations overlapping in that familiar cafeteria hum. To my left, Harry was leaned halfway over the table toward Lonnie, one hand sketching shapes in the air like he was lecturing instead of eating. He'd barely touched his food, fork abandoned in favor of whatever problem he was mentally dismantling.

"No, see, you're overthinking it," Harry said, tapping the tabletop twice for emphasis. "It's not about memorizing the formula, it's about understanding why it works. Once you get that, geometry's easy. It's all logic. Shapes don't lie."

Lonnie frowned, chewing slowly. "You say that like it's supposed to help."

Harry grinned, unapologetic. "It should. You're just not letting it."

I couldn't help the faint smile that tugged at my mouth. Harry had always been like that—sharp in a way that didn't need to announce itself. Numbers, angles, proofs… they clicked for him the way swinging through the city clicked for me. Different worlds, same kind of instinct.

Across the table, Kong had leaned back in his chair, arms crossed over his chest as he talked low to Flash. His voice wasn't hushed exactly, but there was a seriousness to it that hadn't been there earlier. "I'm just saying, man, some of the guys weren't thrilled," Kong said. "You don't just walk away like that and expect everyone to clap."

Flash shrugged, stabbing at his fries. "They'll live."

"Coach didn't look happy either."

"Coach is never happy," Flash shot back. "Only difference now is I don't have to pretend it's my problem."

Kong studied him for a second, then nodded once. "Yeah. I figured that's what you'd say."

Flash didn't respond, but there was something steadier about him than I remembered. Less noise. Less performance. It was strange, watching him like this—like some switch had been flipped and he'd decided to be real, consequences be damned.

I was still half-lost in that thought when someone stopped beside me.

"Hey."

I looked up and found Gwen standing there, tray balanced against her hip. Her hair was pulled back, a little messier than usual, like she'd rushed out the door this morning. She smiled, but it was cautious.

"Hey," I said back, and immediately felt how long it had been since we'd last spoken. The realization sat heavy in my chest. May's funeral felt like a lifetime ago and a second ago all at once. Strange how grief warped time like that.

"Mind if I sit?" she asked.

"Yeah. Yeah, of course."

She slid into the seat across from me, setting her tray down carefully. For a moment, neither of us spoke. Not awkward, exactly—just quiet. Like we were both aware of the gap and didn't quite know how to step over it.

"So," Gwen said finally, glancing up at me. "How are you doing?"

There it was. Not pity. Not pressure. Just a question.

"I'm… alright," I said, and meant it, mostly. "Taking things as they come."

She nodded, like that was enough. Her eyes flicked to my face then, lingering on the scratches I'd been pretending weren't there. "What happened?"

Before I could answer, Flash leaned in from the side, grinning. "He swears he rescued a cat that was stuck in a tree."

Gwen blinked. Once. Twice. Then she looked back at me.

"A cat."

I sighed. "I don't know about saying I rescued it," I said. "But the cat wasn't very friendly."

That got a soft laugh out of her. Not loud. Just real. "I'm sure the cat's sorry."

"Eh," I shrugged. "Looked pretty pleased with itself when it happened."

For just a second, my mind betrayed me. Black leather. White hair. A smirk that cut sharper than her claws. The way she'd landed light as nothing at all, eyes bright with something dangerous and familiar. Felicia.

I pushed the thought away as Gwen turned her attention to Harry and Lonnie's argument about triangles, the conversation naturally drifting elsewhere. Plates shifted. Chairs scraped. Someone laughed at something I missed. And just like that, lunch flew past. But part of me couldn't stop thinking about that white-haired thief.




Meanwhile…


Felicia Hardy sat on the edge of the narrow bed in her safehouse, one knee drawn up, the other foot planted against the floor, a flash drive resting in her palm like it weighed more than it possibly could. The room was quiet in that particular way only forgotten places ever were—no hum of traffic close enough to intrude, no voices bleeding through walls. Just the low tick of an old clock she'd picked up from a pawn shop and the distant, ever-present breathing of the city outside.

She turned the drive over between her fingers. Black casing. Unmarked. Unassuming. The kind of thing that didn't look like it could ruin lives.

Richard Parker's research. That was what everyone seemed to want. Enough to break into secured facilities. Enough to scare people into disappearing. Enough to get Walter Hardy—her father—off the board entirely.

Her jaw tightened at the thought.

She leaned back on her hands, staring at the ceiling, replaying the night over and over again like a scratched record that refused to move on. The chase. The rooftops. The way the city had blurred beneath her boots as she ran, breath burning, heart hammering like it was trying to claw its way out of her chest. Spider-Man swinging after her, relentless but not cruel. Persistent in a way that had felt… different.

And then the Red Vulture.

The memory made her shoulders tense automatically. Red feathers slicing through the air, wings beating with a sound too close to tearing fabric. It had gone straight for blood. For her.

She remembered thinking, very clearly, this is it. Not in a dramatic way. Just a simple, awful certainty.

And then Spider had been there.

Not just there—between her and it. Like it was the most obvious choice in the world.

Felicia exhaled slowly through her nose and sat back up, curling her fingers around the flash drive again. That was the part she couldn't reconcile. He'd chased her across half the city, yes. Tried to stop her, sure. But when it came down to it, when the Red Vulture had made his intentions clear, Spider hadn't hesitated.

He'd saved her.

"I'm just a guy trying to help out where I can."

The words echoed in her head, clear as if he were standing right in front of her again, mask tilted just slightly as he said it. No grand speech. No performance. Just… honesty. Or at least something that felt dangerously close to it.

Felicia scoffed quietly, shaking her head. "Yeah," she muttered to the empty room. "Sure you are."

She'd grown up around liars. Polished ones. Convincing ones. Men who smiled too easily and promised too much. Walter had drilled it into her from the time she was old enough to understand words: Everyone wants something. Figure out what it is before they figure out what you have.

Private school had only reinforced the lesson. Rich kids with perfect smiles and hollow eyes. Boys who thought charm was a currency and girls who treated people like accessories. Everyone was playing at being something they weren't, because that was the game.

Spider didn't fit.

That was what bothered her most.

He felt genuine in a way that she couldn't explain in the pit of her stomach. All she wanted was to get her father back, and Spider had offered to help.

And that scared her more than the Red Vulture ever could have.

Because if he was telling the truth—if he really was just trying to help—then that meant something else entirely. He'd been attacked by Jackal's cronies as well, but he didn't seem to have an agenda. Maybe he really did only want to help.

Felicia looked down at the flash drive again, thumb brushing over its smooth surface. She could run. Disappear. Sell it to the highest bidder and vanish into a new identity before anyone knew what hit them — but then she'd never see her father again.

Walter hadn't raised her to be a ghost.

He'd raised her to finish what she started.

"We'd have a better shot working together."

She repeated Spider's words aloud this time, the sound of her own voice strange in the quiet. A dry chuckle escaped her before she could stop it. "Yeah," she said softly. "Working together. Real comforting thought."

She was sixteen. A rookie. No matter how sharp she was, no matter how many locks she could pick or systems she could slip through, the truth didn't change. She was out of her depth. Playing a game with players who didn't blink at collateral damage.

For the first time since Walter had disappeared, the thought didn't just make her angry.

It made her tired.

Felicia stood and crossed to the window, pushing the curtain aside just enough to peer out at the city. New York sprawled beneath her, alive and indifferent, lights flickering like stars that didn't care who was watching. Somewhere out there, Spider-Man was probably nursing his own bruises, convincing himself he could handle this alone.

Idiot.

She lifted her wrist unconsciously, fingers brushing the spot where he'd held her against the stone of the Chrysler Building.

"What's a girl to do?" she murmured to the glass.

The city didn't answer. But for the first time in a long while, Felicia didn't feel quite so alone staring back at it.




Hell's Kitchen


The cathedral was quiet in the way only old places ever managed to be. Not silent—never silent—but hushed, reverent. The kind of quiet that pressed in on you, asked you to listen to yourself whether you wanted to or not.

Matt sat on one of the wooden pews halfway down the nave, hands folded loosely in his lap. The wood creaked softly beneath his weight when he shifted, a familiar complaint. He didn't face the altar directly. He never did anymore. Instead, he angled himself slightly to the side, head bowed, eyes unfocused behind closed lids.

Incense still lingered faintly in the air, clinging to stone and cloth alike. Wax, old paper, polished wood. The scent of the place was grounding. Honest. It reminded him of Sundays with his father, of scraped knuckles and quiet prayers murmured under breath. It reminded him of things that felt further away than they should have.

He hadn't come here to confess. Not exactly.

Matt listened.

A handful of parishioners occupied scattered pews, their heartbeats steady, their breathing calm. A priest moved somewhere near the altar, footsteps slow and measured. Outside, the city pressed against the cathedral walls, muffled but insistent. It always was.

Then there was something new.

Footsteps.

Not the soft shuffle of rubber soles or the careful tread of someone afraid to disturb the peace. These were sharp. Purposeful. Heels striking stone with confidence, each step evenly spaced, unhurried. The sound echoed faintly through the open space, impossible to miss.

Matt's mouth curved before he consciously realized it had.

There was a scent now, cutting through the incense and candle smoke. Subtle, but unmistakable. Something floral with an edge to it. Clean. Familiar. Dangerous in the way beautiful things often were.

He turned his head just slightly, not enough to be obvious, but enough to acknowledge her presence.

"Elektra?" he said.

She stopped a few feet away.

"Hello, Matthew," she replied, her voice warm, smooth as silk drawn across steel.

It had been years.

He could hear the faint smile in her voice. The controlled breathing. The way her heartbeat stayed steady, unbothered by the weight of the place or the man she'd come to see. Elektra Natchios had never been intimidated by churches, or men who knelt in them.

Matt straightened a little, opening his eyes though it didn't change anything. "I didn't realize you were back in New York."

"I wasn't," she said lightly. "Until I was."

He huffed a quiet laugh. "You always did have a talent for understatement."

She stepped closer, the clack of her heels softening as she came to a stop beside the pew. She didn't sit. Elektra never sat unless she planned on staying a while—or leaving suddenly.

"You look… calmer," she observed.

"Don't spread that around," Matt replied. "I have a reputation to maintain."

"Mm," she hummed. "Former lawyer. Former vigilante. Current priest. Yes, very intimidating."

He tilted his head toward her. "What brings you here, Elektra?"

A pause.

"Can't a woman visit a church without ulterior motives?" she asked.

Matt smiled faintly. "Not you."

She laughed under her breath, conceding the point. "Fair."

Another beat passed between them, heavy with shared history neither of them felt like unpacking just yet. The last time they'd stood this close, the air between them had been charged with something sharper. Bloodier. The city had been different then. So had he.

"Are you busy this evening?" Elektra asked casually.

Matt blinked. "Busy?"

"Yes," she said. "As in… do you have plans?"

He considered it for a moment. Confessionals. Evening prayers. Dinner alone. The same routine he'd been running for months now.

"No," he said slowly. "Why?"

"Dinner," Elektra offered. "With me."

He turned more fully toward her now, an eyebrow lifting. "Dinner? The last time I offered, you rejected me."

"That was a long time ago," she said easily. "And besides—" there was a subtle shift in her tone, something quieter underneath the confidence, "—I have nothing but time now. So what do you say?"

Matt leaned back against the pew, exhaling softly through his nose. "You know most people don't ask priests out to dinner."

"Most priests don't know how to fight blindfolded," Elektra countered. "You've always been an exception."

He shook his head, amused despite himself. "You never did lose your charm."

"So?" she pressed.

He thought about it. About Foggy and Karen. About the cowl sitting untouched in his closet. About the way the city felt like it was holding its breath lately.

"Of course," he said at last.

Elektra smiled. He didn't need to see it to know it was there.

"Excellent," she said. "I hope you still like that Italian place near my apartment."

"Gio's?" Matt paused. "I haven't been there since—" He stopped himself. Swallowed. "—since that night."

Her heartbeat stuttered, just barely.

"We can go somewhere else," she offered, the warmth in her voice dimming just a touch. "If you'd prefer."

"No," Matt said, firmer now. "No, that's perfectly fine."

"If you're sure…"

"I'm sure," he replied. "I'll be out of here at five."

"Good," Elektra said. "I'll pick you up."

She turned to leave, heels clicking once more against the stone. Matt listened as she crossed the cathedral, the scent of her perfume trailing behind her like a ghost.

When the doors closed, the quiet rushed back in.

Matt exhaled, shoulders dropping as tension he hadn't realized he was holding finally eased. He lifted a hand, fingers brushing the cross at his chest, grounding himself in its familiar shape.

Seeing her again—hearing her—was strange. Disorienting. The last time their paths had crossed, the Devil still roamed Hell's Kitchen. Back when Matt Murdock had believed he could balance the scales himself. Before he'd fallen. Before he'd stopped pretending he could outrun the consequences.

Elektra always wanted something. She always had a reason.

He wondered what it was this time.

Matt closed his eyes, thumb resting against the worn metal of the cross, and chuckled softly.

Whatever it was, he owed her the courtesy of listening.




Elektra pulled up to the curb in a sleek black sedan just as the church bells finished marking the hour. Matt stepped out onto the stone steps, the evening air cool against his face, city noise rolling in like a tide that never fully receded. He didn't hesitate. He never did with her. He folded his cane, tucked it under his arm, and slid into the passenger seat.

"Smells new," he said as she pulled away from the curb.

"It is," Elektra replied. "You approve?"

"I can hear the difference," he said with a faint smile. "You always did like to upgrade."

She smirked, eyes forward as they merged into traffic. The city unfolded around them in sound and motion—horns, engines, footsteps, voices layered on top of one another like a living thing.

Elektra drove with the same confidence she did everything else: decisive, smooth, no wasted movement.

Gio's announced itself before they even reached the door. Garlic, tomato, baked bread, wine. The smell alone tugged something loose in his chest. Nostalgia had teeth like that. Inside, the restaurant buzzed with low conversation and clinking glasses, the kind of warmth that came from years of regulars and food that never tried too hard to impress.

They were seated near the back, tucked away just enough to feel private. Elektra slipped off her coat, movements fluid, effortless. She looked different. Not softer—never that—but quieter somehow. Focused inward.

Dinner was good. Better than good. They talked easily at first. Old cases. Foggy. New York. Things she'd seen overseas, though she kept those stories frustratingly vague. She laughed at his dry remarks, teased him when he called her out on it. On the surface, it all fit. Comfortable. Familiar.

Too familiar.

Matt noticed it in the pauses. The way her fork lingered over her plate before she took a bite. The subtle hitch in her breathing when the conversation drifted too close to certain subjects—violence, the city at night, the way Hell's Kitchen never really slept. She was circling something. He could feel it.

He set his glass down carefully.

"Alright," he said. "You've got me."

Elektra looked up.

"Have I?"

"What's on your mind?"

Her smile was immediate. Too immediate, in fact.

"What do you mean?"

"I've known you since I was in college, Elektra," Matt said calmly. "Whenever you're trying to decide whether to ask something, you do this thing with your breathing. Just get it over with. Why'd you really want to see me?"

For a moment, she said nothing. Then she exhaled, slow and controlled, and leaned back slightly in her chair.

"Very well," she said. "I was wondering if you've been… active again."

Matt laughed. It slipped out before he could stop it, sharp and incredulous.

"Active?"

"You know exactly what I mean."

"I told you," he said, shaking his head. "That's from an old life. I will never put that back on."

She watched him closely, eyes sharp but not unkind.

"Matthew," she said with a sigh, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear, "you know as well as I do that you're lying to yourself. I know you have your morals. It's one of the things I—" she paused, corrected herself smoothly, "—admire about you. But you're lying to yourself if you think that's in the past."

His jaw tightened.

"What happened that night," Matt said quietly, "it can never happen again. Do you understand me?"

"It wasn't your fault."

"You weren't the one who pulled that trigger."

"Neither were you," Elektra shot back. "Blaming yourself for that isn't going to bring them back."

"I know," he said, the word clipped.

She softened, just a fraction. "I think you know," she continued gently, "that deep down, you're not happy without your other half. Because the man I know would never be able to sleep at night when he could hear people suffering."

Matt's teeth ground together. She wasn't wrong. That was the worst part. Nights were the hardest. Lying awake while the city whispered its pain to him—cries behind closed doors, whispered threats, the sound of someone bleeding out three blocks away while the world kept turning. It clawed at him. It always had.

"So what?" he snapped. "It's my choice. It's not like you were here, Elektra. You took off like you always do."

She set her fork down slowly, the clink against the plate deliberate.

"Do you know why I left New York?" she asked.

"Obviously not."

"I left to find myself," Elektra said. "After we last spoke, I traveled. A great deal. It led me to a monastery."

Matt snorted. "Oh, that right? You of all people went on a spiritual retreat?"

"I came to terms with who I was," she said evenly. "More importantly—who I want to be. I'd expect the Catholic to be more understanding of that."

"I'm very understanding," Matt replied. "Just not when it comes to you."

She smiled at that, unamused.

"You don't believe people like us get to change."

"I believe change comes at a cost," he said. "And some of us pay it whether we want to or not."

Elektra studied him across the table, the noise of the restaurant fading into the background.

"I came back because you saw what I was capable of, Matthew. You thought I could be of help to those in need. Just like I believe you can be as well."

"I do help, but not like that." Matt leaned back, crossing his arms. "If you're here to drag me back into the dark, you're wasting your time."

"Am I?" she asked. "Because frankly, I'm questioning whether there's bruises underneath those clothes right now."

Matt reached for his glass again, more for something to do with his hands than thirst. He could hear her heartbeat—steady and resolved. He didn't want to talk about the bruises, or where they'd come from.

"We all have our vices."

"Doesn't it bother you?"

"What?"

"The fact you could be doing more? I've heard people talk about it. How it used to be before; back when you were still out there."

"It's better this way."

"Tell that to the child I saved from a burning building last night. Her parents told her stories about the Devil of Hell's Kitchen… and in her time of need, she called out for him. But he never came."

"Do not put that on me!"

"How many people call out for you on a nightly basis, Matthew?" Elektra asked, her voice darkening. "How many cries for help do you block out? Do you atone for that?"

Matt's hand tightened around the stem of the glass before he realized he was doing it. The wine inside sloshed faintly, betrayed him with the sound.

"You don't get to lecture me about atonement," he said, low and dangerous. "Not after disappearing. Not after leaving this city to rot."

Elektra didn't flinch. That, more than anything, told him he'd hit close to nothing at all.

"I didn't leave it to rot," she replied evenly. "I left because I knew if I stayed, I'd become something I couldn't come back from." She leaned forward now, elbows resting lightly on the table. "You stayed. And look at you. You're still bleeding for it."

A beat passed. Two heartbeats. Hers steady. His not quite.

"You think this is restraint?" Matt asked. "You think this is peace?"

"I think it's penance," Elektra said. "And I don't think God ever asked that of you."

That did it.

Matt pushed his chair back just an inch—not enough to stand, but enough to create space. Enough to breathe. The sounds of the restaurant rushed back in around them, laughter spilling from a nearby table, silverware clinking, someone calling for another bottle of red. Life, happening stubbornly around the two of them like nothing was wrong.

"You don't know what God asked of me," Matt said quietly. "You don't know what I promised."

"I know what you took on," Elektra countered. "And I know what it cost you. I also know you're still paying for it every night you lie awake pretending you don't hear the city screaming."

His jaw flexed. She always had a talent for finding the soft tissue and pressing just enough.

"You saved a child last night," Matt said instead. "You wanted me to hear that."

"Yes," she admitted. "I did."

"And you wanted me to feel guilty."

"I wanted you to remember who you are."

Silence stretched between them again, heavier this time. Matt reached up, fingers brushing the small cross beneath his collar. He didn't clutch it. Didn't pray. He just grounded himself in the familiar shape, the cool metal against his skin.

"You're not wrong," he said finally. "About the nights. About the noise. About… any of it." He exhaled slowly. "But that part of me—what I was—it doesn't come back halfway. It never did. It's all or nothing."

Elektra watched him, eyes intent, searching.

"Then maybe," she said carefully, "you don't need to put the Devil back on. Maybe you just need to stop pretending the man underneath him is gone."

Outside, a siren wailed—distant, but unmistakable. Matt heard it veer, slow, then fade. Somewhere else, another one would take its place. They always did.

"I didn't come here to drag you into anything," Elektra said softly. "I came because I wanted to see you. Because I wanted to understand who you are now."

"And?" Matt asked.

She smiled then.

"I think the man I knew is still there, deep down. But you need to get past the guilt that's holding you back. Frank wouldn't have blamed you for what happened. You shouldn't blame yourself."

"Do not bring him into this."

Elektra stood up, and patted him on the shoulder.

"I never thought you'd be the one to look into the abyss and blink… but it's quite alright. If you no longer wish to be that man, then I won't push it. But something has to fill that void."

He scoffed.

"What, are you implying that you'll step in?"

"That's something that remains to be seen, love. But I at least know who I am, and most importantly, I accept all of it. I just hope that one day you can accept that part of yourself."

She started to walk away, but stopped one last time.

"Don't worry about the check. It's my treat."

And then like that, she was gone… leaving him with his thoughts, and the cries of the city echoing in the distance.
 
Ahh shucks, another one Daredevil and Elecra remiss about old times about what happened to the Daredevil vanishing from the public eye .
I think Daredevil here is mirror of Peter Parker could be if Parker ends Vulture's life and what it might cost Spider-Man in the long run . But Spider-Man and Daredevil situation are similar but will they have the same outcome in the battle against the Jackal and Vulture and Red Vulture.
But Ekectra doesn't blame Matthew Murdock for what vaguely happened between the Frank Castle and the Daredevil that night. As Parker Spider-Man us taking over Daredevils old stomping grounds.
As Peter Parker is dealing with Red Vulture and Ben Parker is doing Peter Parker ol photography job in the absolute or more like former daily bugle journalist before Red Vulture destruction havoced his life .
Author San, I will never think this story was AI written, which People can be fooled by the AI or need helped writing stories these days for amateur writers .
This Absolute Spider-Man story is definitely not one of those AI written pieces .your too crisp and fresh .
Continue on
Cheers!
 
Chapter 37: Emotional Volatility New
DISCLAIMER: THIS STORY IS NOT, HAS NOT, AND NEVER WILL BE WRITTEN WITH AI.



By the time the final bell rang, my head was pounding in a way that had nothing to do with concussions or near-misses with concrete. Fourth period bled into fifth, fifth into sixth, the rest of the school day smearing together like wet ink. I kept my nose down, did the bare minimum, answered when called on, and tried not to think about what might be waiting for me at home. The scratches on my face had already made the rounds—whispers, looks, a few half-formed questions that died before they reached my ears. I was grateful for that. Today, silence felt merciful.

Detention came and went the way detentions always did. A small classroom. A bored teacher grading papers. A handful of students staring holes into their desks like maybe they could tunnel out. Mine wasn't new. It was just… continuing. A consequence stretched out over weeks because of a fight that felt like it happened in another lifetime. I sat there, hands folded, leg bouncing despite myself, replaying the footage Flash had shown me over and over in my head. Red wings. A red mask. A white spider. The knowledge that Ben had almost definitely seen it too.

When I finally walked home, every step felt heavier the closer I got to the apartment. I half-expected to open the door and find Ben waiting right there, arms crossed, disappointment already loaded in the chamber. But the place was quiet. Too quiet. His jacket wasn't on the hook. Shoes weren't by the door. For a brief, stupid moment, relief washed over me.

Maybe he hadn't seen it yet.

Maybe I had time.

I dropped my backpack by the couch and headed down the hall toward my room, already rehearsing what I'd say when the conversation inevitably happened. Explanations. Justifications. The truth, but softened. I reached for my door, pushed it open—

—and stopped.

Ben was sitting at my desk.

Not turned toward me. Not angry, at least not visibly. Just sitting there in the chair, elbows resting lightly on the wood, holding a framed photo in his hands. One of the old ones. Him, Peter, and May at Coney Island. I couldn't have been older than ten. All smiles. Sunburnt. Happy in that way you don't realize is fragile until it's gone.

"How was school?" he asked, calm, like this was any other day.

My throat tightened.

"It could've gone better."

He nodded once, eyes still on the photo.

"How was the interview?"

"I—" I swallowed. "How was it?"

"I got the job."

"That's… that's good," I said, and I meant it. I really did. I tried to sound happy, tried to make it real, but something in my chest told me this wasn't what we were talking about. Not really. "That's great, Ben."

"Mm." He set the photo down on the desk, carefully. Like it mattered. Like everything still did.

"How come you're in here?" I closed the door behind me, softer than I needed to. "I figured you'd be… out."

"I know we didn't talk about it," he said, finally turning his head just enough that I could see his profile, "but I thought there was a mutual understanding. I thought school would be important enough that you'd stay there. Keep your two lives separated."

"Ben—"

"You didn't even realize you swung by the Bugle, did you?"

My stomach dropped.

"I did not…" I admitted quietly.

He exhaled through his nose, not angry. Tired. That was worse.

"Where'd the scratches come from? The girl you were chasing, or the other Vulture?"

I hesitated. There was no point lying now.

"The girl."

He nodded again, slow, like he was cataloging facts he already knew. I set my bag down by the wall and crossed the room, lowering myself onto the edge of the bed. My shoulders slumped forward, gaze fixed on the floor between my shoes. I suddenly felt twelve again.

Ironic, given the fact I'm supposed to be fourteen. Eh, timey-wimey age stuff fucking sucks.

I knew I should've stayed at school. I knew that. I also knew the second Norman's message came through, there was no universe where I ignored it. If the break-in had been connected to Vulture — I had to be there. I couldn't risk not being there. The fact that it'd been Felicia instead hadn't changed that.

"Ben," I said finally, voice low, steady despite everything twisting inside me, "I'm not apologizing for leaving school."

"I imagined you wouldn't," he replied. "I'm not mad." He paused, then added, "But you need to let me know what's going on."

"So what," I said, glancing up at him, "every time I put the mask on, I'm supposed to tell you?"

"No, God—" He shook his head, rubbing a hand over his face. "Of course not. I don't need a play-by-play. But if you think it has something to do with that th—thing…" He stopped himself, took a breath. "If it's got anything to do with the Vulture, I need to know. I don't want something to happen to you and find out about it from the news."

That did it. That cracked something open in me.

"I'm sorry," I said. Not because I left school. Not because I put the suit on. But because I understood what he was really saying.

Silence stretched between us, heavy but not hostile. He stood up then, slowly, and crossed the room, stopping a few feet away from me. He didn't touch me. He didn't need to.

"You're growing faster than I can keep up with," Ben said quietly. "And I know I can't stop you. I'm not trying to. I just need to know when something's bigger than usual. When it's dangerous."

"It's always dangerous," I muttered.

He huffed a dry, humorless laugh.

"Yeah. I know. I helped sew the damn suit."

That almost made me smile.

"I'll tell you next time," I said. "If it's about Vulture. Or… whatever's coming next."

Ben studied me for a long moment, then nodded.

"That's all I'm asking."

He picked the photo back up, glanced at it once more, then set it back where it belonged.

"Get some rest," he said. "You look like hell."

"Feel worse," I replied.

"Figures." He paused at the door, hand on the knob. "Dinner in an hour."

"Okay."

The door closed behind him, leaving me alone in my room, the weight of everything settling back onto my shoulders. I leaned forward, elbows on my knees, and let myself breathe.






Dinner smelled like something normal. That alone felt strange.

Ben had thrown together one of his reliable staples—pasta, jarred sauce doctored just enough that it tasted homemade, garlic bread that'd been in the oven a little too long on one side. It was the kind of meal we'd eaten a hundred times before everything went sideways. We sat across from each other at the small kitchen table, the overhead light humming faintly, forks scraping against plates in a quiet rhythm.

For a few minutes, neither of us said anything. Not awkward silence. Just… space. The kind you need after a conversation like the one we'd just had.

Ben was the one who broke it.

"So," he said casually, twirling pasta around his fork. Too casually. "What was the deal with the girl?"

I exhaled, leaning back slightly in my chair.

"It's hard to explain," I shrugged. "I don't even know where to begin."

"That's usually how it starts," he said dryly. "Why were you chasing her?"

"She broke into Norman's penthouse. I thought it might've been the Vulture."

Ben froze mid-bite. Slowly, he lowered his fork back to his plate.

"Maybe my mind's slipping," he said, pinching the bridge of his nose, "but how would it have possibly been the Vulture? There's so much going on, I can't keep track of it anymore."

"The day it attacked us," I said, choosing my words carefully, "it broke into Norman's first. That's how it knew I was technically the last one to have the spider that bit me."

"Right… right," he murmured. He nodded, like lining pieces up on a board only he could see. "So how'd you find out she broke in?"

"Norman texted me. Alarm went off."

That earned me a look. Not disapproving. Just tired. The kind that came from realizing the world was bigger and meaner than you'd planned for.

From there, I gave him the rundown. Not the cinematic version. Not the part where my heart was trying to punch its way out of my ribs or how close the Red Vulture came to tearing me apart. Just the facts.

Ben listened without interrupting, chewing slowly, eyes never quite settling on anything. When I finished, he sat back in his chair and let out a breath.

"You think she can be trusted?"

I couldn't help it. I chuckled softly, shaking my head.

"With her?" I said. "That depends."

"Comforting," he replied.

"She could've run," I added, more serious now. "When the other Vulture showed up, she didn't. She helped me get away when she had no reason to. That has to mean something."

Ben studied me for a long moment.

"Sounds like you're setting yourself up for trouble."

I stabbed a piece of garlic bread with my fork.

"Trouble seems to find me a lot these days."

"Yeah," he said quietly. "I've noticed."

He went back to eating, but his appetite clearly wasn't what it had been a few minutes ago. After another beat, he spoke again.

"But two Vultures worries me," Ben admitted. "You nearly died fighting one of them. How are you supposed to fight two?"

"I don't know," I said honestly. "But I'll figure it out. If I'm lucky, I won't have to deal with them head-on."

"And if you're not?"

I smiled faintly.

"In the off-chance the ol' Parker luck kicks in, I'll do what I do best."

"And what's that?"

"Go down swinging."

Ben's jaw tightened.

"You're not immortal."

"Yeah," I said, shrugging. "But where would the fun be in this if I was?"

He stared at me like I'd just said the worst possible thing.

"You think this is fun?" he asked, worry cutting through his voice. "Because I don't."

"Dying isn't fun," I said quietly. "Fighting for another day is."

He leaned back, running a hand through his hair.

"Some days it's hard to understand you, kiddo."

"I know," I replied. "But I like to keep you guessing."

He snorted despite himself.

"You're going to be the reason I need blood pressure medication, aren't you?"

"No," I said quickly. "But if you keep ordering fast food, the cholesterol's going to be a problem."

Ben scoffed.

"You're not keeping me from my junk food. I've lived too long to not eat what I want."

"Uh-huh. Sure," I smiled. Then, like an idiot, I kept talking. "By the way… think you could take me shopping for a suit soon?"

He blinked.

"A suit? Peter, we're on a budget."

"I know, I know," I said, holding up a hand. "But MJ and I are going to Homecoming together."

There was a split second of silence.

Then Ben choked on his drink.

"Oh shit—" he coughed, grabbing a napkin, eyes wide. "Could—could you repeat that?"

I laughed, the tension finally breaking as something warm and normal filled the space between us again. For just a moment, it felt like things were okay…






Meanwhile…






Mary Jane sat on the porch steps with her knees pulled up, chin resting against them, eyes fixed on the vacant Parker house across the street. The place looked wrong like that. Too still. Too quiet. Like a set after the actors had gone home. A weight sat just behind her ribs, heavy and unmoving, no matter how many times she shifted or told herself she was being ridiculous. Her conversation with Peter that morning had helped, at least a little. Hearing his voice, knowing he was upright and breathing and still him, it had smoothed out some of the sharper edges in her chest. But his absence lingered anyway, like a bruise you didn't notice until you pressed on it. It was funny, in a cosmic, unfair sort of way. She'd known the boy next door for barely two months, and yet his presence had become something she didn't know how to function without. That realization alone irritated her.

When had that happened? When had Peter Parker threaded himself so tightly into her daily life that a few weeks without him nearby made the days feel longer, emptier? She scowled faintly at the thought, like she could intimidate it into leaving. Anna had probably noticed. MJ wasn't exactly subtle when something was bothering her. But if Anna had picked up on it, she hadn't said a word. Maybe she was waiting. Or maybe she figured MJ would talk when she was ready. That was the thing about Anna—she gave you space whether you deserved it or not.

Peter hadn't been what MJ expected. Not even close. The goofy kid she'd met down by the waterfront, red-faced and sweating through his shirt like he'd just run a marathon, had somehow managed to be completely different and exactly the same ever since. Back then, he'd seemed like the kind of guy who'd apologize to a chair if he bumped into it. Not someone who'd ever throw a punch. Well—scratch that. He seemed like someone who could fight, maybe, but only if every other option had been ripped away from him. The kind of person who would stand there and take it until standing wasn't an option anymore. He didn't look brave. He didn't act brave. He didn't even sound brave.

That was why she'd liked him almost immediately. Peter felt safe. After her parents' divorce, nothing had felt safe. Everything had come apart too fast, like someone yanking a tablecloth and pretending they hadn't meant to. Forest Hills had been Anna's idea. A change of scenery. Stability. Somewhere MJ could breathe again without waiting for the next shoe to drop. It'd been her first day under Anna's roof when she'd met Peter, all awkward smiles and nervous energy, like he wasn't sure where to put his hands or his words.

She let out a quiet, dry laugh as the memory surfaced—Peter leaning against the railing by the water, gasping for air, sweat plastering his hair to his forehead. God, May had talked about him constantly. Ben too, but mostly May. The nephew this, the nephew that. Brilliant. Shy. Polite. MJ had half-expected him to show up in a sweater vest carrying a stack of textbooks and apologizing for existing.

"The two of you would hit it off, I'm sure," May had said more times than MJ could count.

The picture May painted hadn't quite matched the Peter she met. Especially not the Peter who ran headfirst into a burning building without stopping to think. That image still made MJ's stomach twist. Watching him disappear into smoke and flames, knowing he could get hurt—or worse—and realizing she cared enough for that thought to terrify her. They hadn't known each other long. Not really. But seeing him risk his life for strangers, for kids he didn't even know, it cracked something open in her. Made her aware of how deeply he'd already rooted himself into her life.

Her father had made closeness complicated. Drunken rants. Sharp words thrown like knives. The way he looked at her sometimes, like she was a mistake that refused to go away. It trained you to keep people at arm's length, to expect disappointment before it could surprise you. Connections were dangerous things. They could be taken away. Twisted. Used against you.

But Peter hadn't done any of that. He hadn't pushed. He hadn't judged. He'd just… listened. That night on the porch, when she'd finally broken down about her dad and Peter had wrapped his arms around her without a single stupid comment or awkward joke, it had been the first time in a long while she'd felt genuinely understood. Not fixed. Not pitied. Just heard. She hadn't realized until much later that he might've been the only real friend she had.

They'd talked constantly after that. Late-night phone calls that started with homework and spiraled into everything else. Music. Movies. Dumb jokes. Serious stuff they didn't know how to label yet. MJ had laughed more in those weeks than she had in months. She'd felt normal. Like herself again.

Then the storm came.

"MJ—call the cops, now!"

The memory hit her like a punch. One second Peter was yelling, the next he was bleeding, broken, and May was gone. Everything shattered at once. Peter was ripped out of his own home, and the person she talked to every single day vanished into the city like smoke, leaving behind nothing but questions and a quiet that hurt to sit with.

Learning about his powers hadn't changed how she felt about him. If anything, it just reframed it. Explained the things that hadn't quite made sense before. That bravery she admired—the willingness to throw himself into danger for people he cared about—it wasn't something she could replicate. She knew that. And part of her hated herself for it.

They hadn't talked much since he got out of the hospital. Life had a way of stepping in, of making things complicated when you weren't ready for it. But the bond between them hadn't frayed. When he finally came back to school and their eyes met across the gym, that had been enough. No words. No explanations. Just an understanding that whatever this was between them, it was still there.

She wasn't entirely sure why she'd asked him to Homecoming. MJ wasn't really a dance person. Crowds. Expectations. All of it made her itch. But the idea of spending a night with Peter—of things feeling normal again, even briefly—had outweighed her hesitation.

God. She sounded pathetic when she thought about it like that.

MJ leaned back on her hands and stared up at the sky, the city humming quietly around her.

The memory crept up on her without warning, the way the worst ones always did. MJ shifted on the porch, the wood cool beneath her palms, and suddenly she wasn't here anymore—not really. She was back there, wrapped up in the dark and the quiet, knees pulled tight to her chest, the night air heavy with salt and distant traffic. Peter's voice echoed in her head, softer than most people ever let themselves be.

You don't have to pretend with me, okay?

She closed her eyes.

She remembered how she hadn't answered right away. How hard it had been to make the words come out without sounding small. Her arms tightening around her knees, knuckles whitening like she could squeeze the feeling out of herself if she tried hard enough. Back then, she'd stared into the dark like it might swallow her whole before she had to say it.

I shouldn't let it get to me.

God, she'd said that so many times in her life. Like saying it out loud made it true.

Her dad. Drunk. Or maybe not. It didn't matter anymore—the difference had blurred so much it was basically meaningless. He always sounded the same when he called now. Slurred edges, bitterness soaking through every word. And that line. That awful, ugly line.

They were happy. Everything was fine until you came along.

Even now, remembering it made something twist painfully under her ribs. It wasn't just the cruelty of it. It was how casually he said it. Like he was stating a fact. Like she was a problem that had never stopped being inconvenient.

She swallowed, opening her eyes again, the empty Parker house still across the street. MJ hadn't cried that night at first. She'd said it like she was reciting a voicemail, just like Peter had noticed. No tears. No shaking. Just numb. She'd learned early that crying in front of her dad only made things worse. Tears gave him something to push against.

But she remembered the moment her voice cracked anyway. The way the words finally broke through the wall she'd built.

Peter, it… it hurts.

That had been the worst part. Not the anger. Not even the shame. Just the ache. The raw, childish pain of wanting a parent to love you and realizing they never really would.

Why does he hate me?

MJ pressed her lips together now, jaw tightening. She knew the answer, even if she didn't like it. He didn't hate her. Not exactly. He hated what he'd lost. Hated himself. Hated the life he didn't get. And she'd been the easiest thing to blame. A living reminder that things changed, whether he wanted them to or not.

In his mind, she was the crack in the foundation. The thing that ruined his marriage. The reason everything went wrong.

It didn't make it hurt any less.

Living with Anna was better. Infinitely better. The house was calmer. Safer. No slammed doors. No shouting that rattled the walls. Anna didn't look at her like a mistake. She didn't make MJ feel like she had to earn the right to exist. There were routines. Dinners. Quiet understanding. A kind of stability MJ hadn't realized she'd been starving for until she had it.

And still… she missed her parents.

That was the part she hated admitting, even to herself. She missed the idea of them. The version that existed before everything broke. Before the drinking got worse. Before the fighting. Before her dad's voice turned sharp and cruel. She missed the family she'd thought she had. Missed movie nights and car rides and the feeling that she belonged somewhere without conditions attached.

She hated herself a little for that too.

Her gaze drifted back to the Parker house, and before she could stop herself, Peter slipped into her thoughts again. He always did. It wasn't fair, the way her brain kept lining their lives up side by side like it was trying to solve a puzzle. She didn't want to compare. She really didn't. But the comparison was unavoidable.

Peter didn't have his parents. Not really. They were gone in a way that didn't leave room for arguments or bitterness or late-night phone calls that cut you open. They were just… gone. And somehow, that made it cleaner. Simpler. There was grief there, sure—deep, aching grief—but there was no voice on the other end of the line telling him he'd ruined everything just by being born.

He had Ben. May. People who loved him so completely it bordered on reckless. People who showed up. People who fought for him, protected him, believed in him even when he didn't believe in himself. Even now, after everything—after May—Peter still had that. Still had someone waiting for him at home. Someone who worried. Someone who cared enough to yell at him when he screwed up.

MJ hated herself for thinking it, but sometimes Peter's life just felt… better.

Not easier. God, no. But better in the ways that mattered.

She shifted, hugging her arms around herself. It wasn't resentment. Not really. It was envy, quiet and ashamed. She wanted what he had. Not the powers. Not the danger. Just the certainty that she was wanted. That she wasn't a burden. That she didn't have to brace herself every time the phone rang.

She remembered how Peter hadn't tried to fix anything that night. He hadn't said your dad's wrong or you don't deserve that—even though both things were true. He'd just stayed. Leaned closer. Let the silence breathe. Like he understood that sometimes words just got in the way.

That was another thing she found herself comparing. Peter didn't need to perform care. He just… gave it.

MJ let out a slow breath, staring at the darkening sky. She didn't want to be jealous of him. She didn't want to measure her pain against his like it was some kind of competition. But the thought kept circling anyway: despite everything he'd lost, Peter had never been made to feel like his existence was a mistake.

And maybe that was why she gravitated toward him so much.

Not because he was brave. Not because he was kind. But because being near him made her feel like maybe—just maybe—she wasn't broken beyond repair.

MJ shifted on the porch, letting the quiet stretch a little longer. Anna's presence had been a gift she hadn't realized she needed—steady, calm, and entirely grounding. That kind of stability was enough to keep her upright when her own parents' chaos threatened to topple her. Just knowing Anna was there, ready to answer a question she didn't even have to ask, ready to sit in silence when she had nothing to say, was consolation enough.

But even with that, MJ couldn't shake the hollow feeling that lingered in her chest. It wasn't sadness that came in loud bursts or sharp edges—it was quieter, emptier, like a room you walked into and realized had never been furnished. She had people now, sure. She had Anna. Peter. Friends from school. But the conversations that mattered most—the ones that dug past the surface, past the polite smiles and shallow jokes—those were still scarce. Sometimes, when no one was around to fill the quiet, the emptiness expanded, curling around her ribs and pressing down in ways she couldn't quite name.

She drew her knees a little closer, the chill of the evening air brushing her arms. MJ didn't like the feeling, but she accepted it. It was just another piece of her life she was learning to carry. Not tragedy, not despair—just a quiet awareness that some holes couldn't be patched, only worked around. And for now, having Anna nearby, having a steady hand to reach for even when she didn't take it, was enough to keep her moving forward. It wasn't perfect, but it was enough.

Sitting here, it was too easy for her mind to wander to those dark places that threatened to drag her down. She could only hope that once Peter managed to deal with the demons haunting him, things could return to a better place. One where she had her best friend to talk with. One where MJ felt normal.

Her phone buzzed, and as she pulled it out, a small chuckle left her lips. It was Peter.

Hey. You got time to talk?

She smiled.

"For you? Always, Tiger."






Oscorp Tower






The conversation with Peter had left Norman with a burning dread settled deep into the pit of his stomach. Every line Peter had spoken, every grimace he'd managed to suppress behind casual words, had pressed against Norman's chest like a physical weight. He couldn't shake the feeling that the world, or at least a significant part of it, was running off the rails—and Oscorp was sitting square in the middle of the chaos.

He found Smythe in his office, seated behind the polished desk that reflected the dim light overhead, his posture unnervingly relaxed. Papers were stacked neatly, devices humming softly—controlled, precise, oblivious.

"You're here late tonight. Shouldn't you be home?" Smythe asked, eyes flicking briefly to Norman before returning to the small tablet in his hands.

"I had some issues to tie up before I went home. Please, have a seat," Norman replied evenly, his cane tapping lightly against the floor as he approached.

Smythe looked up, tilting his head slightly. "What did you want to see me about?"

Norman paused, letting the silence stretch just long enough to weigh on Smythe. Then, in slow, deliberate cadence, he said, "I just got word that on September 23rd, there was a break-in at the Archive. Mind telling me why I'm just hearing about it now?"

Smythe's lips pressed together. "I didn't think it was something you needed to be concerned with, sir."

"I decide what concerns me," Norman replied, keeping his voice calm but firm, walking with measured steps toward the window. "This company, despite my limited involvement, is still mine. You may be the face, but I need to be in the loop."

Smythe lifted his hands, a small, defensive shrug. "With all due respect, I'm afraid you're not in a condition to be stressing yourself out over these kinds of matters. Keeping you healthy is the goal, Norman."

Norman stopped at the window, gazing out at the city lights but not really seeing them. He shook his head slowly, disgust curling in the back of his throat. "If it were a trivial robbery, I might not be concerned. But to hear another winged monster attacked the Archive? That's beyond excusable." His voice was quiet, calm—but it carried a weight that made the air feel thicker, heavier.

"Norman, I—" Smythe's eyes flicked up, sharp now. "You put me in charge because you weren't fit to handle it, wasn't that the reasoning?"

Norman's expression darkened, his cane tapping impatiently against the floor.

"Twenty men dead, Alistair. Twenty!"

"It was an unfortunate accident," Smythe said quickly, leaning back, his tone pitched like a plea.

"Unfortunate?" Norman spun around, cane thumping against the floor like a gunshot. "THEY WERE TORN APART!" His voice echoed off the walls, a roar of fury that wasn't just for Smythe but for the weight of every failure piled on his chest. "YOU'RE SO DAMN CONCERNED WITH YOUR MACHINES THAT YOU DON'T VALUE HUMAN LIVES?!"

Smythe recoiled slightly, the tablet slipping from his hands. He rose from the chair, hands spread defensively, but the fire in Norman's eyes held him in place.

"I value lives, Norman! Every one! But you have to understand—these experiments, these projects, the risk assessments—they can't always account for… variables."

"Variables?" Norman barked, taking a step closer, the cane held loosely but with intent. "Variables are what make men die! Men—human beings—you reduced them to variables because it's convenient! Because your mind can only handle equations and outcomes, not actual responsibility!"

Smythe's jaw tightened, his calm facade cracking, the usual confident posture faltering.

"I—It's not as simple as you're making it sound—"

"Nothing is as simple as you're making it sound?" Norman's voice dipped lower, a grinding, dangerous undertone. "Do you know what it feels like to be responsible for people? To know that they trusted you and now they're gone because you were too busy calibrating some mechanism that you designed to feel important?"

Smythe's hands clenched at his sides. "We do what we can, sir. You know that. You put me in charge to keep things running. You… you can't expect perfection."

Norman laughed, but it was hollow, bitter, and it didn't reach his eyes. "Perfection? I don't expect perfection. I expect accountability. I expect you to tell me when the company I built—when the people I swore to protect—are put in mortal danger. I don't care if I'm tired, sick, old, or broken. That's my responsibility. Not yours to decide when I can be told. Not yours!"

Smythe swallowed, defensive but cornered, his mind racing.

"You… you're asking for a level of oversight that isn't—"

"I'm asking for the bare minimum," Norman cut him off, voice sharp as a blade. He paced, slow but deliberate, every step a metronome of control. "You want to act as if Oscorp is yours now. That I'm the irrelevant variable in my own company. But I am still here. I am still Alistair Smythe's superior. And I will not have you making judgments about who lives and who dies while I'm kept in the dark."

Smythe flinched at the name, at the authority, at the absolute certainty radiating from Norman.

"I—sir—"

"Enough!" Norman's cane hit the floor with a definitive thud. He moved closer, looming, the fire in his eyes unflinching. "This isn't a negotiation. This isn't about convenience or efficiency. You were tasked with protecting people, and twenty men died. Twenty! And now, when the Archive—an institution, a facility, a place of knowledge—was attacked, you thought it wasn't my concern? You thought I would simply trust your judgment without question?"

Smythe's mouth opened, closed. Opened again.

"I… I miscalculated."

"Miscalculated?" Norman hissed, leaning in, face inches from Smythe's. "Do you know what that word feels like when you're looking down the barrel of a problem that could have been stopped? Twenty lives. Twenty. And now there's another monster on the loose. And you kept it from me. For what reason, Alistair? To prove you could handle it? Or because you don't respect me enough to treat me like the man I am, the one who built this company?"

Smythe's shoulders sagged, his defenses crumbling. Norman straightened, cane tapping lightly against the floor again, slower now, measured—but the anger hadn't left.

"I do not forgive negligence, and I do not forgive secrecy. You will bring me every detail, every report, every anomaly connected to the Archive, the Jackal, and these so-called Vultures. And you will do it tonight."

"Yes, sir," Smythe whispered, voice low, finally subdued, but his pride still lingered in the slight tremor of his jaw.

Norman's eyes softened fractionally, though the edge remained. "I'm not asking for loyalty, Alistair. I'm asking for competence. Do not let human lives be the variables in your calculations again. I will not allow it."

Smythe nodded, unable to meet Norman's gaze. "Understood, sir."

Norman turned back to the window, letting the city's lights absorb the tension between them. The office was quiet now, but the threat, the reminder of responsibility, the weight of what had been lost—and what could still be—settled like a cold stone in both their chests. Norman's cane clicked softly against the floor as he moved back to his chair, voice quieter now but still carrying the unmistakable authority of a man who would not bend, not for machines, not for men, not for anything but what he deemed right.

"Do not fail me again, Smythe," he said, almost a whisper.

"I won't, sir," Smythe replied, subdued, chastened, aware for the first time in a long while of exactly how little control he truly had.

Norman finally lowered himself into his chair, the fight drained but the vigilance unbroken.

"Have you reached out to the families yet?" he asked, voice quiet but edged with authority.

"Yes, sir. We took care of it immediately," Smythe said, hands clasped behind his back, gaze flicking to the floor.

"Good. Seems you can do something right after all," Norman replied, letting the corner of his mouth twitch faintly.

Smythe straightened, taking a small step back, preparing to leave, but the weight in the room made him pause. "Sir… I am more comfortable with my machines because they won't betray me. They're reliable. If I had been given the opportunity to utilize them, those men and women may have still been alive."

Norman's eyes sharpened. He leaned forward slightly, resting his cane against his knee. "You couldn't make your machines capable of handling a fourteen-year-old with superhuman strength. Why would I entrust those bots to protect our workers?"

"Parker is a different vari—" Smythe began, but Norman's gaze cut through him like a blade.

"Call that boy a variable. See what happens," Norman said flatly. Smythe's throat moved, swallowing, and Norman leaned back, expression calm but lethal.

The tension in the room was suffocating, the only sound the faint hum of a nearby console. Norman's hands rested on the arms of his chair, fingers tapping lightly, deceptively casual.

Then Norman's eyes narrowed, and the corner of his mouth twitched again, almost a smirk.

"You know, Alistair… I only learned about it because Peter told me. Your reports, your security logs, your careful monitoring—none of it reached me. I had to hear it from a boy who's barely old enough to be in high school."

Smythe's mouth twitched, a muscle jumping in irritation—or fear. He opened it, then closed it again. The words he wanted to say were trapped somewhere between his pride and the fact that Norman had him pinned.

"If I didn't know better, sir… I'd say you care more about Parker than your own flesh and blood," Smythe said, voice low, almost measured.

Norman's gaze flared instantly, sharp as a scalpel. "As far as I'm concerned, he is my flesh and blood. And you will never make a comment like that again, do you understand me?"

"Yes, sir," Smythe said quickly, voice edged with deference now, though Norman could see the flicker of something deeper: annoyance, maybe resentment, maybe a suppressed ambition that had been under his skin all along.

"That boy has gone through hell these last few months, and as far as I'm concerned, he appears to be more reliable than you are."

Norman watched as Smythe shifted, a step back, eyes darting around the room almost as if the walls themselves could judge him. There was an instability there, subtle, dangerous—a mind on the edge of reasoning and obsession, a man who valued the certainty of his machines more than the lives they were designed to protect.

"You will compile every file you have. Every anomaly, every breach, every potential lead on the Archive and this Jackal. I want it on my desk before dawn," Norman said, his voice smooth but unrelenting.

"Yes, sir," Smythe repeated, nodding stiffly, the words automatic but hollow.

Norman let him go, letting the tension ease just slightly, though he didn't allow himself the luxury of relief. Smythe's heels clicked against the polished floor as he made his way toward the door. He stopped, turning his head, eyes briefly meeting Norman's.

"Sir… I just—" Smythe began, then swallowed, his words dying in his throat. He left the room, the door sliding shut with a soft hiss.

Alone, Norman felt the room shrink around him. He leaned back in his chair, cane resting across his lap, but the adrenaline still hummed through his veins. His chest tightened. Heart racing. A strange, hollow heat burned behind his sternum, like a reminder that no matter how much control he wielded over the world outside, his own body could betray him in the smallest, most inconvenient ways.

He pressed one hand to his chest, steadying himself. The pulse beneath his fingers was erratic, fast. He closed his eyes, drawing in a slow breath, counting to himself, trying to settle the storm that refused to quiet.

The pain in his chest refused to leave, a stark reminder of his mortality. His time was running out. He knew that— that was why he was trying to fix things before it was too late.
 
Come on Norman Osborne, which you're ain't leaving us yet again without taking the Goblin serum or actually serum variant for saving your life. That damn Osborne disease strikes again. Ben and Peter Parker talked about his daily bugle job.
Although, Norman Osborne giving Allister Smythe a piece of his mind after failing one simple job on the archives job with the Red Vulture , which is why do fuck around with his company and Norman Osborne is a badass corporate business man for a reason Allister.
I really hope Allister Smythe and Peter Parker can wrangle him into being somewhat better working alliances in the hero business.
Besides I definitely won't Allister Smythe to his new monster from of neurogenic power ftom the 90's vibe to help Spider-Man Peter Parker.
MJ Watson can helping her spiraling crush on Peter Parker and can't wait till she meets Felicia Hardy Black Cat in school, Cat fight anyone or competition, HAHAHA!
Continue on
Cheers!
 
Chapter 38: The Bonds That Tie Us, Part 1 New
Disclaimer: This story is not, has not, and never will be written with AI.



No amount of thinking could prepare me for tonight. My talk with MJ last night had given me a small reprieve from the thought of meeting with Felicia — to see if she accepted my offer to work together.

Oh, I'm good at coming up with swarms of rejection scenarios. Eh, there's better wording for this but I don't even care. My brain is fried, even after a full night of sleep.

Really, I guess I'm just worried that I struck out before I could get my foot in the door with Felicia. She's one of Spidey's most popular, most revered allies. The on-again, off-again love interest that casually teeters on the line between hero and villain. The Catwoman to his Batman.

Mainly I'm worried that she somehow got herself in trouble since we went our separate ways yesterday. Red (I need to come up with a better name for him) tracked her pretty easily. I doubt she would have made it if I hadn't been there to intercept.

Anyway, I keep replaying that conversation over in my head again as I walk around the apartment. Overthinking has always been my enemy. I just, I don't know. I don't know why this is concerning me so much. Is it because it's Felicia? Is it because she's in as much danger as I am? Or is it because I'm developing a hero complex?

Now, that's the overthinking talking. Hero complex? Really? That's stupid. I'm not seeking out a crisis to fix things. I'm worried, that's all. Too big of a heart for my own good. I can't turn a blind eye easily.

I finally caved and sat down at the small kitchen table, staring at the plate in front of me like it had personally wronged me.

Eggs. Toast. Coffee that smelled stronger than it tasted. The kind of breakfast Ben made when he was trying to be responsible—and today, of all days, he'd actually had somewhere important to be. His first official day at the Bugle. No borrowed credentials, no "temporary contributor," no I-know-a-guy nonsense. Just Ben Parker, reporter. He'd left early, nervous enough to triple-check his tie and still forget his jacket.

The apartment felt quieter without him.

I ate anyway, scrolling through my phone with my free hand like I was daring the universe to ruin my appetite.

It didn't hesitate.

The video had gone fully viral overnight.

I clicked it before I could stop myself.

There I was—him, technically—moving faster than the camera could track, the red mask a smear between frames. And there was the other one. Bigger than the one from before. Meaner. Built like a nightmare with wings.

Mayor Fisk's press conference followed right after.

He stood behind a podium like he owned the city—which, honestly, wasn't far off—and spoke with that calm, deliberate voice that always made it sound like he was doing everyone a favor just by breathing.

"The reports suggesting this so-called 'Vulture' is connected to prior sightings in Lower Manhattan are false," Fisk said. "We are dealing with an entirely separate incident."

Separate incident. Right.

"And let me be clear," he continued, hands folded. "The masked vigilante involved is a threat to public safety. He has assaulted dozens of New Yorkers."

I snorted into my coffee.

"Criminals," I muttered. "You forgot the last word, big guy."

Sure, yeah. I'd gone too far a couple times. I wasn't blind to that. Adrenaline plus fear plus a city that never stops punching back—it adds up. But I wasn't proud of every hit I'd thrown. I wasn't pretending I hadn't crossed lines.

That's why I'd gone to the hospital the other night.

Derek had been awake. Groggy. Arm in a cast, sling propped awkwardly against his chest. He looked surprised when he saw me standing there, half-expecting… I don't know. Another punch, maybe.

He was being released. Stable. Going to jail, sure—but alive. Breathing. Complaining about the food.

I'd apologized. Quietly. Awkwardly. He hadn't known what to do with that.

Neither had I.

I finished breakfast, rinsed my plate, and left the apartment behind me. The hallway smelled like cleaning solution and old carpet. The city outside was already awake, already loud, already pretending nothing had changed.

School was… school.

Classes blurred together in that way they always did when my head was somewhere else. Chalk squeaked. Pens scratched. Teachers talked about equations and dates and things that mattered on paper but felt distant when weighed against wings and masks and headlines.

The best part of the morning came before first period.

Harry was already there, leaning against the lockers. When he saw me, he smiled — for real this time.

"Hey," he said.

"Hey."

That was it. No edge. No weird silence. No unspoken funeral shadows hanging between us. We talked about nothing. Classes. A dumb movie he'd watched. His dad being insufferable in a very specific, very Norman way.

It was… nice.

Normal, even.

The rest of the day dragged. Each class felt longer than the last, like time itself was testing my patience. Lunch was forgettable. History felt like it took an hour just to get through attendance.

PE, though.

PE was different.

MJ was already there, hair pulled back, stretching like she actually liked this class. I still didn't understand that about her, and I probably never would. But when she smiled at me—really smiled—it eased something tight in my chest.

We talked. Quietly. Jokes under our breath. Complaints about the drills. Nothing heavy. Nothing that needed fixing.

And somehow, that made it better.

By the time the final bell rang, I was exhausted in that specific way that had nothing to do with physical effort and everything to do with carrying too many thoughts for too long.

I headed home with the city humming around me, phone buzzing in my pocket with notifications I ignored. Somewhere out there, Felicia was making a choice. Somewhere else, Fisk was shaping a narrative. Somewhere above it all, wings waited to beat the air again.

Me though? I needed to make a stop by Oscorp. Hopefully Smythe was there so I could talk to him about the Spider-Talons. And I'd like to get the undersuit if Norman got it finished already.

But first I needed to go home and drop off my school stuff.






I dropped my bag by the door the moment I got back to the apartment, looking around for a moment. The place still smelled faintly like coffee and Ben's aftershave, a reminder that today mattered to him in a way it didn't to the rest of the city. I checked my phone once — only a message from MJ asking how school went — and then texted Ben to let him know I'd be going to Oscorp for a little bit.

'Hey, heading over to Oscorp. Then I gotta see about Cat. I'll be home late.'

Ben replied back a minute later.

'Just be careful. If something comes up, let me know.'

'I will.'

Oscorp wasn't going to visit itself, and if I let myself sit still too long, I'd start thinking again. That was dangerous territory.

The ride over blurred together. Subway rattling. Reflections in dirty glass. My own face staring back at me like it was trying to decide if I looked more like a kid pretending to be an adult or an adult doing a terrible job pretending to be a kid. By the time I stepped into Oscorp, the building's sterile brightness snapped me back into focus. White floors, glass walls, security that knew my face well enough to nod but not well enough to smile. I headed straight for Otto's floor before anyone could intercept me with questions I didn't feel like answering.

Otto's workshop was alive in that quiet, humming way only his spaces ever were. Machines sat half-assembled like patient animals waiting for the right command. Holographic schematics glowed faintly in the air, shifting as if they were breathing. Otto himself was hunched over a workbench, sleeves rolled up, glasses perched low on his nose, fingers moving with the ease of someone who trusted his hands more than anything else in the world.

"Peter," he said without looking up, voice warm with genuine surprise. Then he glanced over his shoulder and smiled. "What a nice surprise. Wasn't expecting to see you today."

"Yeah, well," I said, stepping further inside, the familiar comfort of the place settling over me. "I've been full of surprises lately."

He chuckled at that, turning back to shut down whatever he'd been working on.

"Have you now? I suppose I should be concerned." His eyes flicked to my bag, lingering just a second too long to be accidental. "The web shooters—I haven't been able to find them. I was hoping to do a couple tests today."

"Oh." I laughed, scratching the back of my neck. "So… I actually have them."

Otto blinked. Once. Then again.

"You took them?"

"Borrowed," I corrected automatically. "Temporarily. With intent to return. Eventually."

He folded his arms, not angry—more curious than anything.

"And you felt comfortable doing this without informing me?"

"I was here the other night," I said, choosing my words carefully. "Couldn't sleep. Started thinking about the binders we were using. The polymer matrix was solid, but it wasn't… flexible enough. Not where it counted. I actually figured it out, Doc."

His expression shifted instantly. Curiosity sharpened into something almost boyish.

"You figured out what was missing?"

"Yep." I grinned despite myself. "Wanna see?"

"Absolutely," Otto said without hesitation. "We've put so much work into it. How on earth did you manage to figure it out?"

I set my bag down on the bench and unzipped it, pulling the web shooters free. They felt heavier here than they ever did in the field, like they were reminding me where they'd come from.

"Honestly? I got lucky. I ran a few alternative binders through the algorithm while I was here—nothing fancy. Just tweaked the ratios, introduced a reactive compound that responds to kinetic stress instead of resisting it outright. Most of them failed. One didn't."

Otto's eyes were glued to the devices, fingers twitching like he wanted to grab them but was restraining himself out of politeness.

"You tested this… yourself?"

"Not on anything expensive," I said quickly. "I promise."

He laughed under his breath.

"Set up a target," he said, already moving.

One of the automated rigs rolled forward at his command, a reinforced plate locking into place across the room. Otto gestured for me to continue, arms crossed now, attention razor-focused. I slipped the shooter onto my wrist, the familiar weight settling there like it belonged. I aimed, fired.

The web shot out in a clean, sharp line, striking the target dead center. For a split second it shimmered, then hardened, threads pulling tight with a low, almost musical tension. I tugged experimentally. The entire rig lurched forward, skidding across the floor before toppling over with a metallic crash.

Otto stared. Then he laughed—full, delighted, the sound echoing off the lab walls.

"Remarkable," he breathed, stepping closer to inspect the webbing. "It's adapting. Reinforcing itself under load instead of snapping. We should test this further. Stress limits. Heat tolerance. Chemical degradation."

"I'd love to," I said, meaning it, "but I actually want to talk with Smythe if he's in the building."

That stopped him short. He looked up at me, surprise flickering across his face.

"Smythe? How come?"

"He showed me a few of his S-Bots," I said casually, even though nothing about that conversation had been casual. "You know, those crazy robo-guards he's been building?"

Otto nodded slowly, expression thoughtful, a hint of something wary creeping in.

"Ah, yes. The mechanical attack dogs he wishes to implement across the company."

"I know," I said, exhaling through my nose. "I said I didn't get along with him, but there was something I wanted his opinion on. Potential application for the S-Bots that might actually be… useful."

Otto glanced at me over the rim of his glasses. That look—half skeptical, half amused—was one I'd come to recognize.

"Alistair isn't known for being receptive to ideas from others."

"I figured as much," I admitted. "But I might as well try."

He sighed, the sound low and thoughtful, and turned back toward the overturned target. With a few practiced motions, he reset the rig, the machine responding to him like it trusted him more than anyone else in the building. Then he paused, hands resting on the metal frame.

"It's up to you," Otto said finally. "But Peter—" He straightened and looked at me fully now. "I just wanted to say that despite being built in the Tower, the web shooters are yours to do with as you please. There's no need to return them. Especially seeing as I can tell you have no intention of doing so."

That caught me off guard.

I blinked, genuinely surprised, and felt heat creep up my neck. I hadn't thought I was being subtle, exactly, but I also hadn't expected him to call it so cleanly. I gave a small nod anyway. No point pretending otherwise.

"I wasn't trying to lie to you," I said.

Otto waved a hand dismissively, already smiling.

"Nonsense. It's not lying. You're protective of your own creation. That is not only understandable, it's healthy." His smile softened, turning a little more earnest. "I just wish you would have told me. I was worried someone had taken it."

That landed harder than I expected.

"Yeah," I said quietly. "I'm sorry. Really. I should've said something."

"I accept your apology," Otto replied easily. "And for what it's worth, I'm relieved. The idea that our work might have walked out the door without your involvement was… unpleasant."

I let out a breath I hadn't realized I was holding and nodded again, the tension bleeding out of my shoulders. It was moments like this that reminded me why I trusted Otto more than almost anyone in this building. He didn't need ownership. He didn't need control. He just wanted the work to mean something.

My eyes drifted across the lab, settling on the Spider-Talon shell resting where I'd left it earlier. Even inert, it had a presence to it—sleek, angular, unfinished in a way that made my brain itch. I walked over and rested a hand on the casing, fingers tracing along the seams where plates would eventually interlock.

Otto followed my gaze.

"I was wondering what that was," he said. "This the 'application' you referred to?"

I nodded.

"Yeah. The web shooters gave me an idea, and I want to see if there's any merit to it."

He stepped closer, circling the shell with slow, deliberate interest.

"From what I've learned, Peter," he said, "every idea has merit. It merely depends on the circumstances."

I smiled at that, small but genuine.

"You're not wrong."

For a moment, neither of us spoke. The lab hummed around us, machines breathing quietly, lights reflecting off polished steel and glass. This place always felt like a crossroads—between what was possible and what shouldn't be attempted, between curiosity and consequence.

"I should get going," I said eventually, lifting the shell carefully. It was heavier than it looked, the kind of weight that promised responsibility whether you wanted it or not. "I'll let you know how it goes."

Otto nodded, hands clasped behind his back.

"Please do. And Peter?"

I paused at the door, looking back.

"Be careful," he said. Not as a warning. Not as a command. Just concern, plain and honest.

"I will," I replied. And I meant it.

I stepped out into the hallway, the lab doors sliding shut behind me with a soft hiss. The further I walked, the quieter it became, Oscorp's endless corridors stretching out like arteries feeding the heart of something enormous. I adjusted my grip on the Spider-Talon shell and headed deeper into the building, toward Smythe's lab, my thoughts already turning over possibilities I probably shouldn't have been entertaining—but couldn't stop myself from chasing anyway.






Smythe's lab felt colder than the rest of the Tower. Not temperature-wise—Oscorp loved its climate control—but in the way the air seemed to resist you, like it didn't particularly care whether you were breathing it or not. Machines dominated the space: articulated arms suspended from rails, half-assembled S-Bots perched in charging cradles like obedient predators, cables coiled with almost anatomical neatness. It smelled faintly of ozone and lubricant, sharp enough to sit at the back of my throat.

Smythe stood at his workstation with his back to me, fingers moving fast across a holographic interface. He adjusted his glasses with a short, irritated motion, jaw tight.

"I don't have time to speak right now," he said flatly, without looking up.

"Not even for me?" I asked.

He jerked upright, spine stiffening as he turned. For a split second, his expression was something close to surprise—then it smoothed over into something sharper. Calculating. He scoffed, though it lacked the bite of condescension. If anything, it felt rehearsed. Like he'd been expecting this visit, just not when it came.

"Well, if it isn't the prodigal son," Smythe said. "I've been looking into your family history, Mr. Parker."

"That's totally not concerning," I chuckled, shifting the Spider-Talon shell under my arm. "Why are you looking into my family?"

"Norman's behavior with you has been… questionable," Smythe replied, waving a hand as if brushing aside an inconvenience. "I was curious what made you so special, beyond your extraordinary capabilities."

He never was subtle.

"I didn't know your father used to work here before he passed," Smythe continued, already turning back to his screen. "Head of Cross-Species Research."

"Yeah," I said.

That earned a short, humorless chuckle from him.

"Back when Oscorp had the gall to work with Stark." His fingers paused, then resumed. "I am busy, Mr. Parker. What can I do for you?"

Straight to the point. Fine by me.

"I was hoping to get your input on this," I said, lifting the shell so he could see it properly.

Smythe glanced over his shoulder, unimpressed. "Am I supposed to know what that is?"

"A mechanical augment meant to help me in the field."

"So a weapon."

"In the right hand, yes," I nodded.

He considered that for a moment, then straightened and gestured toward the central worktable.

"Very well. Let's take a look."

I stepped forward, setting the shell down carefully. Smythe moved in close, closer than I expected, eyes scanning every seam and joint with surgical focus. His irritation hadn't faded—it simmered just beneath the surface—but now it had direction. Purpose. He didn't ask questions at first. Just listened as I walked him through the concept.

When I finished, Smythe leaned back slightly, folding his arms.

"Essentially a weaponized grapnel hook," he said. "I'll admit, I wouldn't have expected that from you. You came off as more of a pacifist."

"Normally I am," I replied. "But this is a special case."

"Let me guess," Smythe said, tilting his head. "Those winged heathens I've been hearing so much about?"

I exhaled slowly and nodded.

"I don't understand the hyperfocus on these creatures," he continued. "What's your stake in it? Beyond the fight you had with it."

The question landed heavier than he probably intended. Or maybe exactly as intended.

"One of them killed my aunt," I said.

Smythe didn't react right away. No sharp intake of breath. No sympathetic frown. Just a pause—brief, measured—like he was recalibrating a variable in his head.

"I'm sorry to hear that," he said at last. "That makes sense."

Smythe didn't bother turning from his screen when he asked what I needed from him. His fingers moved in quick, precise bursts over the keyboard, glasses riding low on his nose, the blue glow of schematics reflecting faintly off the lenses.

"What exactly do you need from me?"

I shifted the Spider-Talon shell in my hands, feeling its weight again, like it was judging me.

"I'm having trouble wrapping my head around how to make this practical without overloading it. That, and the winches would need to wind in on a whim. Fast. Really fast. Otherwise the target just snaps free."

That finally got him to look up. Just a glance at first, sharp and assessing, like he was already stripping the idea down to parts in his head. He pushed his chair back and stood, rolling his shoulders once like a man who'd been stuck sitting too long.

"Leave it here," he said, curt. "I'll come up with a schematic. Shouldn't take too long. I've made something similar before. Early S-Bot prototypes."

That caught me off guard.

"Then why isn't it in the current ones?"

He paused for half a second. Not long, but enough that it felt intentional.

"They're designed to protect Oscorp personnel," he said. "As in, neutralizing threats through force. What I designed back then was adjacent to capture. Containment. Anyone foolish enough to cause harm in their presence doesn't deserve a second chance."

I frowned.

"That's… harsh."

"It works," Smythe replied, dry as dust.

I set the Spider-Talon shell down on the workbench between us. The metal rang softly against the surface, the sound swallowed almost immediately by the lab's constant mechanical thrum. He leaned in, hands clasped behind his back, eyes scanning every seam and joint like he was reading a familiar language.

"Now," he said, straightening, "is there anything else?"

"Not particularly," I replied. "I appreciate it."

"Happy to be of assistance." The words were right. The tone wasn't. Then his mouth twitched, just barely. "Although, Mr. Parker… next time you discover something problematic regarding me, perhaps you could come see me first. Rather than reporting straight to Norman like a lap dog."

That one hit harder than I expected.

"He spoke with you?" I asked.

"Yes. He did." Smythe's jaw tightened. His hands folded neatly in front of him, posture stiffening like he'd slid into armor. "I do not appreciate being circumvented like that. If you had concerns, you should have come to me."

"You weren't available at the time," I said, keeping my voice even.

"Don't make excuses," he snapped, finally looking me dead in the eye. "It's unbecoming of a man of your stature."

I blinked.

"That almost sounds like a compliment."

"It wasn't." He exhaled through his nose, clearly irritated now. "How did you get that information, anyhow? It shouldn't have reached you."

I shrugged.

"I have my ways."

For a second, I thought he might push. Dig. Demand specifics. Instead, he straightened his glasses and turned back toward his console.

"No matter," he said. "I'll be sure to tighten security further to avoid future leaks."

"Maybe you should've tried to avoid any injuries," I shot back, before I could stop myself.

His fingers froze over the keys. The pause stretched, brittle and sharp.

"Have a good day, Mr. Parker," Smythe said at last, voice clipped, final.

I nodded, taking the cue. Pushing it further wouldn't do either of us any favors. I turned and headed for the door, the lab's hum growing louder again as the tension settled back into the walls where it belonged.

Once I was out in the hallway, I stopped.

Just for a second.

Something about him didn't sit right. The way he talked about people like faulty components. The way his irritation felt less like wounded pride and more like something territorial. Norman trusted him. Maybe too much. And Smythe clearly didn't like being reminded whose company this actually was.

I rested my hand on the doorframe, debating.

Another time, I decided. I've got bigger issues at the moment.

By the time I made it down to the lobby, the Tower felt different. Not quieter—Oscorp never really slept—but heavier, like the walls themselves were holding onto something they hadn't finished digesting. I checked the time out of habit more than necessity. Still had a little while before seven. Before Felicia. Before I found out whether I'd just pitched the worst team-up idea in superhero history or accidentally changed the trajectory of my life again.

The thought didn't help settle my nerves.

I lingered near the edge of the lobby, letting people pass me without really seeing them, my reflection catching in the polished marble and glass. I looked normal. Too normal. Backpack slung over one shoulder, hoodie zipped up, posture loose in a way that said college kid or intern or just another forgettable face moving through a corporate monolith. If Smythe were watching from one of his cameras, that was probably the version of me he'd see. Nonthreatening. Convenient. Easy to underestimate.

That almost bothered me more.

My thoughts kept circling back to the way the air had felt in there. Not tense in the loud way. Not explosive. Just… sharp. Like standing too close to exposed wiring and knowing one wrong move could light you up. Norman had warned me before—never outright, never in so many words—but he'd made it clear enough. Smythe was brilliant. Necessary. Dangerous in ways that didn't announce themselves. The kind of man you didn't fire because you worried more about what he'd do afterward than what he was already doing now.

Norman believed in control. Not domination—control. The difference mattered to him. Keep Smythe close, keep him watched, keep him believing he still answered to someone. Let him feel important without ever letting him forget whose name was on the building. It was a balancing act, and for the most part, Norman pulled it off.

But something had shifted.

I couldn't shake the feeling that whatever conversation they'd had the night before had tilted the scales. Smythe hadn't been cowed. He'd been irritated. Offended. Like someone who'd been reminded of a leash he'd convinced himself wasn't there anymore. That kind of resentment didn't fade. It calcified. It waited.

And then there was the family thing.

That was the part that really stuck under my skin.

Looking into my history wasn't something you did casually. Not like checking credentials or confirming clearance. He'd gone digging. Past my name. Past my file. Past the surface-level facts Norman would've already known. He'd looked into my father. Into my blood. And he'd done it quietly enough that I only found out because he wanted me to know.

That didn't feel academic. That felt deliberate.

If it was meant as a threat, it was a stupid one. Smythe didn't strike me as stupid. Which meant it was either a warning, or a test. Seeing how I'd react. Seeing if I'd flinch. Seeing if I'd run straight back to Norman again or try to handle it myself. Either way, it was the kind of move that told me I'd just been reclassified in his head. No longer a curiosity. No longer a useful anomaly. Something else.

Something closer to a problem.

The thought twisted in my chest, but I forced myself to breathe through it. Spiraling wasn't going to help. Not now. Not when I had bigger things on the horizon. Like a certain cat burglar who might—or might not—be waiting to hear from me in a few minutes. Like the fact that I was still running on fumes and bad decisions and whatever stubborn streak kept convincing me I could juggle all of this without dropping something important.

I stepped outside, letting the city hit me full force. The noise. The smell. The constant motion. New York had a way of pulling you back into the present whether you wanted it to or not. I checked the time again, then glanced down the block, already mentally mapping the quickest route to grab food without getting sucked into another headline or recognizing another blurry freeze-frame of myself doing something Fisk would label an assault.

I knew what the news was saying. I'd seen enough of it already. The clips looped endlessly, stripped of context, reduced to violence without cause. I was a threat. A menace. Funny how I was still being considered that, even without Jameson creating waves in the media. That's just my luck.

Learning hurt. Apparently, so did growth.

Food first. Think later.

I ducked into a place I barely registered, ordered something I wouldn't remember, and let myself sit for a few minutes without doing anything useful. The quiet helped. Not silence—New York never gave you that—but a softer noise. Manageable. I ate, slowly this time, grounding myself in the mundane act of chewing and swallowing and existing as just a guy at a table instead of a walking complication.

By the time I checked the clock again, I felt steadier.

That was when I pulled my phone out.

Calling MJ wasn't a conscious decision, not really. It was instinct. A reflex I'd developed without noticing. When my head got too loud, when the thoughts started piling up in ways that made everything feel heavier than it should, she was the one person who could cut through it without trying. She didn't fix things. She didn't lecture. She just… existed with me in the moment. Asked dumb questions. Made dry comments. Let me breathe.

And yeah, maybe there was more under the surface than either of us wanted to admit. Maybe that warmth I felt when I saw her name pop up wasn't strictly platonic. But right now, it didn't have to be anything. It could just be a voice on the other end of the line keeping me anchored while the rest of my life tried to tilt sideways.

I stood, tossed my trash, and headed back out into the evening, phone in hand, Oscorp already fading behind me. Smythe could wait. Norman could wait. The city would still be there when I was done.

For the next few minutes, I just needed to not be alone in my own head.






Osborn Penthouse






Dinner was quieter than Norman remembered it being, though he couldn't say when that shift had happened. The table was set properly—of course it was. Plates warmed, silverware aligned, the soft hum of the city filtered through reinforced windows high above the street. It was the kind of meal that suggested stability, routine, control. The kind of thing Norman Osborn had always believed in.

"How was school?" he asked, breaking the silence before it could stretch too long.

Harry shrugged, pushing a piece of food around his plate before answering. Normal stuff. Classes. Nothing terrible. Nothing great. He mentioned Peter, almost offhandedly, said they were talking more again. That things felt… less weird than they had a few days ago.

Norman nodded, a small, genuine smile tugging at his mouth before he could stop it. He was glad to hear that. Truly. The tension between them had bothered him more than he'd let on. Peter had always been important to Harry—before everything, before the spider, before the coma, before the city seemed to develop a personal vendetta against the boy. Hearing that they were finding their way back to each other should have been nothing but relief.

Instead, guilt settled in his chest like a stone.

Smythe's voice echoed uninvited in the back of his mind, sharp and precise.

If I didn't know better, sir… I'd say you care more about Parker than your own flesh and blood.

Norman pushed the thought away and focused on his son. Harry looked thinner than he remembered, though that might have been imagination. He was quieter, certainly. Less animated. The sharp edges of teenage arrogance had dulled into something more withdrawn, more careful. Not sad, exactly—but not happy either. Like someone conserving energy because they weren't sure how much they had left.

Norman recognized the look. It unsettled him.

He had always prided himself on being present for Harry. After Emily died, that had become a promise rather than a preference. He'd learned how to cook badly and pretend it was charming. Learned how to sit through school meetings and feign interest in subjects he barely understood. Learned how to listen without trying to fix everything immediately. They'd grown close in those years, closer than many fathers and sons ever managed. It was something Norman had clung to, especially once his own diagnosis loomed over him like a quiet countdown.

And then Peter happened.

Or rather—Peter happened again.

Norman's thoughts drifted, as they so often did, back to that hospital room. The boy lying impossibly still, machines doing the work his body refused to. The spider bite that shouldn't have existed. The research that never should have been left unsecured. The guilt that had lodged itself into Norman's bones the moment he realized how close his own ambitions had come to killing someone he loved.

Because that was the truth, even if he rarely allowed himself to phrase it that way. He loved Peter. Not as a replacement. Not as a projection. But as something fiercely his own. From the moment Peter woke up confused and frightened and missing pieces of himself, Norman had felt a responsibility deeper than corporate duty or scientific curiosity. This wasn't about Oscorp. This wasn't about legacy. This was about a boy who'd been broken by forces far larger than himself and was still trying—against all reason—to stand back up.

Then the Vulture tore through his life, and Norman had watched history threaten to repeat itself. Violence. Loss. Consequences spiraling outward from choices made years ago. And when Peter started slipping out at night, bruised and bleeding and burning with that same stubborn sense of responsibility Norman recognized all too well, the fear had sharpened into something almost unbearable.

All he'd wanted—still wanted—was to keep Peter safe. To mitigate damage. To make amends for sins that couldn't be undone.

Somewhere along the way, his attention had narrowed.

Harry cleared his throat, asking a question Norman barely registered at first. He answered automatically, keeping his tone light, controlled. The mask slid into place as easily as it always did. He'd worn it long enough that it barely felt like one anymore.

But inside, the awareness lingered.

He had missed things. Small ones, mostly. Changes in Harry's posture. The way his laughter came less freely. The way he no longer filled silences with noise, instead letting them stretch like he was testing how long they could last before someone noticed. Norman had been in the same room, yes—but his mind had often been elsewhere. On security reports. On lab upgrades. On contingency plans designed around a teenager who should never have needed them.

That realization hurt more than Norman expected it to.

He watched Harry eat, noted the absentminded way he picked at his food, the faint circles under his eyes. Not depressed—not yet—but hovering close enough to the edge that Norman's chest tightened. He knew that place. Knew how easy it was to slip into it when grief and uncertainty went unaddressed.

Emily's absence still lived in this house. In the corners. In the routines that had shifted but never fully healed. Norman had always believed they were handling it together. That their shared loss had forged something resilient between them.

Maybe that had been true.

Maybe it still was.

But resilience didn't mean immunity.

Norman swallowed, the food tasting duller than it should have. He told himself this wasn't a zero-sum game. Caring for Peter didn't mean caring less for Harry. Love wasn't something you diluted by spreading it out. He knew that, intellectually. Believed it, even.

Emotionally, it was harder to reconcile.

Because Smythe had been wrong in his implication—but not entirely wrong in his observation. Norman's fear for Peter had been louder. More immediate. Peter's danger was visible, physical, pressing. Harry's was quieter. Internal. Easier to overlook if you weren't careful.

Norman resolved, then and there, to be more careful.

Not with grand gestures. Not with forced heart-to-hearts or sudden attempts to overcorrect. Harry would see right through that. He always did. No—Norman would start smaller. Show up. Ask questions and actually listen to the answers. Make space again, the way he used to.

The way he should have continued to.

Dinner wound down without incident. Nothing dramatic. Nothing broken. Just a father and son sharing a meal, suspended in a moment that felt deceptively ordinary. Norman knew better than to take that for granted.

As Harry stood to clear his plate, Norman watched him go, the guilt still there—but tempered now by something steadier. Determination, perhaps. Or resolve.

He had made mistakes. He would make more.

But not this one again.

"Harry!" Norman said abruptly.

Harry paused halfway to the counter, plate in his hands. He glanced back over his shoulder, one eyebrow lifting in mild surprise.

"Yeah, Dad?"

The word Dad hit Norman harder than it should have. It always did, lately. He stood from the table but didn't immediately move closer, as if crossing that distance required more courage than boardrooms or hostile takeovers ever had. For a moment, he simply looked at his son—really looked at him. The slope of his shoulders. The way he held himself like someone trying not to take up too much space in his own home.

"I just—" Norman stopped, exhaled through his nose, and tried again. He had rehearsed speeches like this in his head before. They never survived contact with reality. "Sit for a minute. Please."

Harry hesitated, then set the plate down and turned fully to face him. He didn't sit, but he leaned back against the counter, arms folding loosely. Waiting. Not impatient. Just guarded enough to sting.

Norman moved closer now, resting his hand on the back of one of the chairs.

"I know things have been… off," he said. "These past few weeks. I know I've been distracted."

Harry shrugged, eyes dropping briefly to the floor.

"It's fine. You're busy. You always are."

Norman shook his head immediately.

"No. Don't do that. Don't make excuses for me."

Harry frowned, confused now.

"I'm not. I mean—it's just how things are. Oscorp, the city, everything going on with—" He stopped himself, jaw tightening. "It's fine."

"That's exactly the problem," Norman said, his voice firmer than he intended. He softened it quickly. "It shouldn't be fine. Not to you."

Harry looked away again, staring at something unseen beyond the window.

"Dad. You've done enough."

The words landed like a quiet accusation, even if Harry hadn't meant them that way. Norman felt the weight of all the years behind them—the hospital rooms, the late nights, the promises made in the aftermath of loss. He straightened, his hand tightening briefly on the chair.

"It's never enough," Norman said. "Not when it comes to you, son."

That made Harry look back at him. Really look. The detachment wavered, just for a second, revealing something more vulnerable underneath.

"You don't have to say that," he muttered.

"I do," Norman replied. "Because I mean it."

He stepped closer, lowering his voice—not out of secrecy, but respect.

"When we lost your mother, I told myself one thing. That no matter what happened to me, no matter how demanding the world became, you would never feel alone in it. That I would be here. Present."

Harry swallowed, his arms loosening slightly.

"You are here."

"I'm in the room," Norman corrected gently. "That's not the same thing."

Silence stretched between them, heavy but not hostile. Norman pressed on before he could lose his nerve.

"I've been thinking a lot about the last few months. About what I've missed. And I don't like the answers I've come up with."

Harry shifted his weight, uncomfortable.

"Dad—"

"You've been through enough," Norman said, cutting in—not sharply, but decisively. "Emily. Everything that followed. Growing up faster than you should have had to. And lately…" He paused, choosing his words carefully. "Lately I've been looking past what's right in front of me. And that stops now."

Harry searched his face, as if looking for the catch.

"You don't have to fix anything," he said quietly. "I'm okay."

Norman almost smiled at that. Almost.

"That's what you've always said," he replied. "Even when you weren't. I raised you to be strong, but I also raised you to be honest with me."

Harry looked down at his hands.

"I didn't want to make things harder."

The admission hurt more than any accusation could have. Norman felt something twist in his chest, sharp and unwelcome.

"You were never a burden," he said immediately. "Not for a single moment. If I ever made you feel like you had to carry things alone, that's on me."

Harry didn't respond right away. When he finally spoke, his voice was softer.

"I just didn't want to compete."

Norman blinked.

"Compete?"

"For your attention," Harry said, not looking at him. "With everything else. With… everything."

The unspoken name hung between them. Norman closed his eyes briefly, the guilt flaring anew.

"There was never a competition," he said. "And if it felt that way, I failed you."

Harry let out a slow breath.

"I know you care about him. About Peter. I get it."

"That doesn't diminish what I feel for you," Norman said firmly. "Nothing could."

Harry finally met his eyes again. The distance hadn't vanished, but it had shifted—no longer a wall, more like a bridge still under construction.

"Okay," he said. Just that. But it mattered.

Norman nodded, accepting the small victory.

"I want to do better," he said. "Not tomorrow. Not when things settle down. Now."

Harry hesitated, then gave a faint, almost reluctant smile.

"I'd like that."

Norman felt his shoulders ease, just a fraction.

"Good. Then we'll start simple." He paused, then added, almost casually, "You should invite Gwen over for dinner sometime."

Harry's eyebrows shot up.

"Really?"

"Yes," Norman said. "I'd like to get to know the girl you're dating. Properly. Not in passing. Not between crises."

Harry considered that, then nodded.

"She'd like that. I think."

"Then let's make it happen," Norman said. "No agenda. Just dinner."

Harry smiled a little more this time. "Yeah. I'd like that too."

They stood there for a moment longer, neither quite ready to move on just yet. It wasn't a grand reconciliation. No sweeping declarations or dramatic embraces. Just a recalibration. A quiet promise being rebuilt, brick by brick.

For the first time in weeks, Norman felt like he was facing the right direction again.






Meanwhile…






My phone read 6:56 when I checked it mid-swing, the numbers glowing just long enough to remind me how stupid hope could be. Four minutes. That was it. Four minutes until I'd have my answer, one way or another, about whether tonight was going to mean something—or if I'd just been talking into the wind with a girl who knew how to disappear better than anyone I'd met so far.

I let the phone slip back into my pocket and focused on the rhythm instead. Release, arc, catch. The city met me halfway every time, concrete and steel playing their part while I did my best not to overthink things. That didn't last long.

The building came into view sooner than I expected. Same rooftop. Same quiet stretch of sky above it. The place where we'd landed after barely scraping our way out of Red Vulture's reach. Funny how a patch of tar and rusted vents could turn into a landmark in your head after one bad night. I slowed, landed, and walked the last few steps toward the edge, letting my momentum die naturally. No dramatics. No pacing. Just… waiting.

I hated that part.

I checked the time again out of habit. Still 6:56. The seconds felt heavier up here, like the city below was holding its breath with me. Traffic hummed faintly, sirens cutting through now and then, the normal pulse of New York continuing on like nothing important was happening on this roof. Maybe that was the point. Maybe this wasn't important. Maybe I'd read too much into a conversation that happened under adrenaline and fear and mutual survival instinct.

Felicia Hardy wasn't a sure thing. I knew that. I'd known it the second she'd looked at me like she was measuring how useful I could be. Not cruel. Not cold. Just… desperate in a way she didn't want anyone to see. Walter Hardy was still missing, and that kind of absence gnawed at people. It hollowed them out and replaced the empty space with sharp edges. I couldn't blame her for that. Hell, I understood it better than I liked to admit.

If I were in her position, I'd probably be dangerous too.

That was the problem. She'd do anything to get her dad back. Anything. And "anything" had a way of turning allies into liabilities real fast. I knew it.

The city was full of people who'd crossed lines once and then kept walking because there was no easy way back. Felicia was standing right at that edge, whether she realized it or not.

And yet.

Part of me still hoped she'd show. Hoped she'd choose the version of herself that asked for help instead of the one that took it. I wasn't naïve enough to think that meant trust came free, but it mattered. It mattered that she'd said she'd think about it. It mattered that she hadn't laughed in my face or vanished the second we split up. It mattered that she'd looked tired when she talked about her dad, not scheming.

I exhaled slowly and leaned against the low ledge, eyes drifting across the skyline. Somewhere out there, Vulture was still moving. Somewhere else, Fisk was still lying into microphones. Somewhere else, Smythe was probably building something that would eventually try to kill me. The world didn't pause just because I wanted one honest moment.

6:58.

I pushed off the ledge and stood straight again, rolling my shoulders like that would shake the tension loose. It didn't. My thoughts circled back, stubborn as ever. If she betrayed me, I'd survive it. I always did. The part that worried me wasn't the physical fallout. It was what it would mean if I stopped believing people could still surprise me in good ways. That was a line I didn't want to cross. Once you lost that, the mask stopped being something you wore and started being something you hid inside.

The wind shifted, colder now, carrying the smell of rain that hadn't fallen yet. I glanced at my phone one last time.

6:59.

I didn't look at the skyline after that. I watched the edges instead. The places someone would land if they didn't want to be seen. The shadows between structures. I told myself it was tactical awareness. It probably was. It was also me bracing for disappointment.

The minute ticked over.

7:00.

For half a heartbeat, nothing happened. And then something moved.

She came in light, boots touching down just a few feet in front of me, momentum absorbed cleanly but not perfectly. There was a slight hitch to it, the kind you only noticed if you were looking for inexperience. Rookie mistake. One she corrected instantly, straightening like she'd meant to land that way all along. Her eyes flicked to my stance, my hands, my face, cataloging everything with quick, practiced glances that didn't quite hide the nerves underneath.

Relief hit me harder than it should have.

"You showed up," I said, before I could stop myself.

She tilted her head, gaze sliding past me to the city, then back again.

"You're early… I saw you waiting."

I shrugged, the tension easing just enough to let a hint of humor through.

"I didn't want to keep you waiting."

Felicia smiled softly.

"What a gentleman."
 
Chapter 39: The Bonds That Tie Us, Part 2 New
Disclaimer: This story is not, has not, and never will be written with AI.


She eyed me from across the rooftop, the yellow tint of her mask's lenses distorting her features ever so softly in the evening light. I hadn't expected Felicia to actually show up. Part of me was hopeful, sure, but hope only got you so far.

Seeing her now felt like the equivalent of winning the lottery. It sounded corny, even to me — but the truth was Felicia really was the one person I'd hoped to cross paths with in this universe. From the moment I knew I was Peter Parker, her name always lingered in the back of my head, written into the fabric of my very being. If you could have met your favorite character from a series, what would you feel? In fact, I'm more surprised by the fact my heart isn't pounding against my ribs.

"I take it you're willing to work with me?" I asked, following the longest second of my life. Her smile was nearly as intoxicating as MJ's was, and that wasn't a competition. Sincerity has always been important to me, and MJ was the only one whose smile seemed to always be genuine. Even when she was sad or worried. Felicia's smile was so similar in the way her walls weren't completely up.

"I'm here, aren't I?" she laughed. "Or are you really that dense?"

"Social cues aren't my forte." I shrugged.

"I thought you were being playful."

"Just depends on the situation." I replied, and watched as she tilted her head at the statement.

"Does it have to do with females?"

"That's a loaded question."

"Is it?" Felicia took a step towards me. "You sure seemed confident enough when you were chasing me. Or is that how you get your kicks?"

So, that's what she's doing. She's teasing me, trying to see where the cracks are. That's smart. I can admire that. Doesn't mean I like it, but I can admire it.

"You caught me in a good mood yesterday, before everything went down with Big Bird's angry cousin."

Felicia let out a quiet breath that might've been a laugh, might've been a scoff. She shifted her weight, boots scraping softly against the rooftop gravel, then crossed her arms like she was settling in for a negotiation rather than a reunion.

"Should I take that as you're in a bad mood today?" she smirked, chin tipping up just enough to be challenging.

"That's up to you, Felicia," I replied, lifting one hand in a loose, noncommittal wave. I didn't feel like giving her the satisfaction of a clear answer. Truth was, I wasn't sure myself. Nervous, yeah. On edge. But bad mood? Not exactly. This felt… important. Dangerous in a quiet way.

She studied me for a second longer than necessary, eyes hidden behind those lenses but not unreadable. Then she nodded, as if she'd reached some internal conclusion.

"I did some thinking," she said.

"And?" The word slipped out before I could dress it up. Apparently, I was still terrible at playing it cool.

She uncrossed her arms and took a few steps closer, slow and deliberate, like she was testing how much space I'd let her take. I didn't move. Didn't want to give her the wrong idea—or the right one.

"I'd much rather work alone," she said plainly. "But unlike you… I don't have superpowers. The Jackal's got at least two of those freaks at his beck and call. You're the one with the most experience handling them, so it makes sense I should stick with you."

There it was. Practical. Calculated. No fluff. I almost smiled.

"I'm sensing a 'but.'"

Her mouth twitched, like she appreciated that I'd called it.

"My father is all I've got, Spider," she said, voice lowering just a notch. The teasing edge dulled, replaced by something sharper. Realer. "I don't want you to get that twisted. I'm not doing this for you—not because you risked your neck for me. I'm doing all of this so I can get him back. If I'm forced to choose between him or you, I'm going to choose him."

The words landed heavier than she probably intended. Or maybe exactly as heavy as she meant them to. Either way, I didn't flinch. Didn't argue. I'd known this was coming. Hell, I'd been counting on it.

"I wouldn't expect anything less from you," I said after a beat. "I think I'd do the same, honestly."

That got a reaction. She slowed to a stop, head tilting as she looked at me like I'd just said something stupid.

"Really?" Felicia narrowed her eyes. "Somehow, I doubt that. Despite what the Mayor says, you don't seem like the type to put anyone in harm's way for your own gain."

I shrugged, feeling the city wind tug at my sleeves.

"Oh, you got that much from our talk yesterday?"

"I'm good at reading people," she said, shoulders lifting in an easy, practiced shrug. "It's something I had to learn growing up."

She let the silence breathe after that, the city humming beneath us like it was pretending not to listen. It didn't feel hostile. It felt measured, like we were both circling the same conclusion from opposite sides, seeing if either of us would blink first.

"So," I said finally, breaking the quiet before it could turn awkward. "We work together. But this isn't permanent. Just until Walter's safe. After that… we go our separate ways."

Felicia considered it, one hip cocked, weight resting on the balls of her feet like she was always one wrong step away from bolting. "That's the idea," she replied. "I don't need a partner long-term."

"I'm fine with that," I said. And I meant it. "I don't want to put you in danger any more than you already are."

Her lips curved into something sly, amused.

"Spider… don't you remember?" She took a slow step closer, voice dipping just enough to make it sound like a secret. "You don't want to cross paths with a black cat."

I huffed a quiet laugh.

"My luck's already bad, Felicia. How much worse can it get with you around?"

Her eyes seemed to light up behind the lenses at that.

"That sounds like a challenge," she teased, closing the remaining distance between us. She reached out, one gloved finger extending, the claw at its tip catching the light before she gently pressed it against the spider emblem on my jacket. Not enough to scratch. Just enough to make the point. "Sure you want to go down that road?"

I didn't step back. Didn't lean in either. Just held my ground, heart annoyingly steady when it probably should've been racing.

"I'm not afraid."

She smiled wider.

"Who said that you were?"

There it was. That push-and-pull. The playful edge that wasn't entirely an act. I could tell she was doing it on purpose—testing me, seeing if I'd trip over my own feet or say something dumb. But there was something else there too, buried beneath the flirtation. A sincerity she wasn't advertising. Like she wanted to believe this could work, even if she didn't trust herself to admit it out loud.

We stood there for a moment longer than necessary, the space between us charged but not crossing any lines.

Eventually, I cleared my throat.

"So… what'd you do with the USB you took from the penthouse?"

She visibly deflated, shoulders dropping just a touch as she leaned back on her heels.

"Wow," she said, pouting openly now. "Straight to business. No warm-up. No foreplay…"

"Sorry," I muttered. "I'm bad at keeping pace."

"I noticed," she shot back, but there was no bite to it. She reached into her pocket, fingers brushing against something solid before pulling it free. The small black drive sat between her fingers, unassuming for something that had caused so much trouble. "I didn't do anything with it," she said. "I thought about it, and figured this was a better option."

"You think whatever you found on Norman's computer is going to lead you to your dad?" I asked, squatting down to the point I was almost on the floor.

"That's the hope, but I'm not sure. Unless you got a better idea."

"I might, actually."

I reach into my pocket and pull out my phone. It's probably not a good idea to be messaging Norman and revealing all my cards just yet, but Norman was the one who hired Walter in the first place. If Felicia's going to get answers, Norman would be the one to give it.

"Rather than breaking into his place, would you like to ask the man yourself?"

"Don't tell me you have a connection to Osborn?" she scoffed incredulously.

"I'm a guy from Queens, you think I can afford fancy gadgets like this?" It hurt to say it, knowing that Peter would have been able to scrounge together enough supplies for the web shooters from dumpster diving. I am a disgrace to his genius.

"Shut up…" Peter groaned from somewhere in the back of my head. I tried not to smile, sensing his embarrassment.

Sorry, Pete. But you know it's the truth.

"That's why you went to the penthouse, then?"

"He gave me a heads up that an alarm went off." I nodded. "One of the Vultures broke into the penthouse a while back." Part of me wasn't sure whether to mention this or not, but oh well. "From the way Norman made it sound, it was the same night your dad went missing."

"What?" her voice raised slightly.

"Apparently Walter and Norman go back a ways. The spider that gave me my powers… someone was trying to get it. I'm guessing it was Jackal, based on what you told me. Norman hired Walter to steal the spider so it wouldn't fall into the wrong hands."

"He made my father come out of retirement to steal a spider from his own company?"

"When you say it like that, it sounds crazy." I rolled my eyes beneath the mask. "But I get why he did it. If Jackal was able to get into the Archive without an alarm going off, even with a Vulture at his side, then why wouldn't he be able to get the spider?"

"That doesn't explain how Dad was found."

"I hate to say it, but probably his scent." I admit.

"What?"

"The Vultures are mutated super soldiers. We don't know how strong their senses are. Turkey vultures can smell carrion from miles away. If they went there looking for the spider, I mean — who's to say that they couldn't catch his scent?"

Felicia visibly recoiled at the implication, and then looked at herself.

"Oh shit." she muttered under her breath, but I was able to catch it clearly. Her voice didn't carry—it folded in on itself, like she hadn't meant for the words to escape at all. "So, that's how he found me so easily."

"What?"

She ran her hands through her hair, fingers snagging for a second before she forced them through, breathing in a little too deep, like she was trying to steady something that wouldn't quite listen. She doesn't look at me right away, eyes drifting instead to the edge of the roof, to the city below, anywhere but here.

"I've been careful to not stay in any place too long." The words come out fast, almost rehearsed, as if she's already defending herself against an argument I haven't made. "But the one time I get anywhere close to something Oscorp related, he just happens to show up?" Her jaw tightens at that, the question sharper than it needs to be. "He must have been tracking me, waiting to see if I could get more of that research for Jackal."

Once she said it, the realization settled in me a moment later. My eyes darted to the phone screen, which had shown a notification from Norman. He replied to me far too quickly.

'I'll be at the Tower shortly.'

"Felicia, let's just say that I'm right. Let's assume that they were able to track by scent." I stand up, walking forward. "That means…"

My heart nearly stopped as it struck me all at once.

"What?" She asked.

"That means everyone I've been around is in danger…"

MJ, Harry, Ben, Otto, Norman, Gwen, and Flash. All of them have been around me, in close proximity, for the last couple weeks. No, no, no… fuck. FUCK. That distance I've put so much work in trying to maintain, to keep them safe. It didn't matter.

I thought it was only because Adrian knew my identity that they'd be in danger. Why was I so stupid? Why wouldn't they know my identity? Why wouldn't Jackal and Red Vulture be aware of it?

Jackal must have been letting it go, keeping them on a leash until he got what he wanted. That research from the Archive… the USB drive. He wasn't just letting Adrian heal. Oh god, he was letting her do the work for them.

"Spider?"

"Felicia, where's the rest of the research?"

"Somewhere safe. Why?"

"Where?"

"A safehouse in Chinatown."

"I need the address. Right now."

She stepped back away from me, confusion evident in the way her shoulders drew back. I wasn't sure how to tell her that she was playing right into Jackal's hands, but god, I needed to have her understand.

"I'm not telling you where my safehouse is."

"If we don't go now, you won't have a safehouse to go back to!"

Her eyes widened beneath the mask, lenses catching the city's glow as she stared at me like I'd just spoken a different language. For a second, neither of us moved. The wind curled around the rooftop, tugging at loose fabric, whispering like it was in on the joke.

"What am I missing?" she asked again, quieter this time.

"That Vulture only came after you when you broke into Norman's penthouse," I said, forcing the words out before I could overthink them. "They didn't just stumble onto you, Felicia. They let you run. They let you think you were ahead of them." I shook my head, a sick pressure building behind my eyes. "They wanted you digging. Wanted you pulling files, stealing data, putting all the pieces together for them. You weren't hiding from Jackal—you were working for him."

Her breath hitched. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just enough that I noticed. She took another step back, boots scraping against the concrete until her heel bumped the ledge. Instinctively, she glanced over her shoulder, then back at me, like the city itself had suddenly become hostile territory.

"No," she said, but it wasn't denial. It was disbelief. "I was careful. I wiped trails. I doubled back. I didn't—"

"I know," I cut in, softer now. "I know you were. That's why this worked. Jackal didn't need you sloppy. He needed you smart."

The silence that followed was worse than if she'd yelled at me. She looked down at her hands, flexing her fingers like she was checking they still worked, like she needed something solid to ground herself. When she spoke again, her voice was steadier—but it felt forced, like balance on a wire.

"So what," she said. "We just abandon everything? Let him have whatever's on that drive?"

"No," I said immediately. "But we don't play this the way he expects us to."

She looked up at me then, really looked at me, and for the first time since she'd arrived, the teasing edge was completely gone. This wasn't Black Cat sizing up Spider-Man. This was a daughter trying to figure out how not to lose the last person she loved.

I stepped closer, slow, deliberate.

"Give me the USB."

Her hand twitched toward her pocket on instinct, then stopped. "Why?"

"Because if Jackal's watching you—and I'm starting to think he always has been—then you're the obvious target," I said. "Me? I'm already on his radar. I'm noisy. I'm predictable. I draw attention just by existing. If something happens tonight, I have a better chance of keeping that drive out of his hands."

She hesitated. I could see the argument forming behind her eyes, the reflexive distrust, the part of her that survived by never giving anyone leverage. Then she exhaled through her nose, sharp and frustrated, and pulled the USB free.

She stepped forward and pressed it into my palm, fingers lingering for half a second longer than necessary.

"If you lose that," she said quietly, "I will never forgive you."

"That's fair," I replied, closing my hand around it. The thing felt heavier than it had any right to be.

She reached for my phone before I could stop her. Her movements were quick, efficient, muscle memory. She tapped a number in, lifted it to her ear. The ring echoed between us once, twice—then she ended the call and handed it back.

"I'll call you when I get there."

"No," I said immediately. "We go together."

She shook her head, already backing away, already preparing to move.

"Spider, we can't be in multiple places at once. If Jackal's playing chess, then splitting up is the only way we don't lose the board entirely."

"I don't like it," I snapped.

"I didn't ask if you did." Her tone softened a beat later. "This is the best way for us to cover ground."

Every instinct in me screamed to argue. To web her ankle to the roof and drag her with me if I had to. I'd already seen what happened when plans like this went wrong. I still remembered the sound of May's voice cutting off mid-sentence, the way the world had tilted and never fully righted itself afterward.

But this wasn't about me. And she wasn't someone I could cage for her own good.

"If something happens," I said, hating how tight my throat felt, "call me. I don't care where I am. I don't care who I'm with. I will be there."

She nodded once.

"I know."

Then she turned and ran, boots pounding once before she vaulted clean over the ledge, disappearing into the maze of fire escapes and shadows like she'd never been there at all.

I stood alone on the rooftop, city noise rushing back in like it had been waiting its turn. My phone felt like a brick in my hand. The USB felt worse.

Call Norman.

Call MJ.

Call Ben.

The names stacked in my head, one on top of the other, until it felt like too much to breathe. Norman was already on his way to the Tower. MJ was probably halfway through her night, blissfully unaware that the walls were closing in again. Ben—God, Ben had already been through enough because of me.

My chest tightened as I backed up, then sprinted, then leapt.

The city swallowed me whole as I swung out into the open air, wind tearing past my ears, panic chasing me step for step. Every face I passed blurred together. Every shadow looked like it might move wrong. Jackal wasn't hunting in the dark anymore—he'd already set the board, and I was just now realizing how many pieces I'd put in danger without even knowing it.

I didn't know who I was calling yet.

I just knew I couldn't waste another second standing still.






Meanwhile…






The Jackal stepped onto the precipice of the rooftop as out of the shadows behind him stepped the Vultures, stretching their wings. Their bloodied beaks split into a twisted grin as Jackal spread his arms out to his side.

"You know what must be done. It's time to end this game. Do not return until you have what I need. Kill whoever you need to get it done."

"Yes, master…" Red Vulture hissed, as Adrian lowered his head with rage-filled eyes. "We will get it done."

"Good. Do not fail me… there will be no last second rescues this time."

Then the Vultures took off into the night in search of their quarry. All the while, Jackal turned and slowly went back into his lair to make preparations.






The Daily Bugle






Ben slung his backpack over one shoulder and leaned against the edge of the breakroom counter, taking in the familiar scent of burnt coffee and stale donuts. It was funny, in a way—he'd spent years fighting Jonah on this, yet here he was. He thought it'd be harder to acclimate to this environment, especially given he'd been 'retired' for nearly ten years now.

"I can't believe you considered making a podcast," Ben said, leaning his shoulder a little against the counter to meet Jonah's gaze. His tone carried that familiar mix of amusement and disbelief he always used when teasing Jonah. He could see it in his mind: Jonah, all elbows and opinions, sitting in his cramped apartment, ranting into a microphone while traffic blared outside.

Jonah snorted, a low, knowing sound that made the hairs on the back of Ben's neck lift in that old, comfortable way.

"I'll have you know, if I had… it would be New York's highest-rated podcast!"

Ben laughed, short and easy, shaking his head. "You always aimed high." The words came out like a half-joke, half-acknowledgement of everything Jonah had ever been—uncompromising, opinionated, impossible to ignore.

Jonah leaned back against the counter across from him, folding his arms and giving Ben that smug little grin that meant he was exactly where he wanted to be, even if he'd never admit it.

"And you," he said after a pause, "do not aim high enough."

"I don't think I need to make everything sound like the end of the world."

"Oh, I disagree," Jonah said, voice dropping in mock seriousness. "Every story sounds like the end of the world when you're five minutes away from a deadline and three editors are breathing down your neck. Some days, it actually is the end of the world. Ever notice that?"

Ben grinned, shaking his head.

"You make it sound glamorous."

"Glorious, Ben. Not glamorous. Different words. You used to know that." Jonah paused for a second, letting the silence stretch. Then he tilted his head toward the small window over the sink. "So… any plans when you get home tonight?"

Ben grabbed his jacket from the back of a chair, shrugging it on with that familiar casual ease he carried when he wanted to hide nervous energy. "Probably watch a movie with Peter. Something light. You know, to get him out of his head for a bit."

Jonah's expression softened for a moment, just a flicker.

"How's he doing?"

Ben shrugged, leaning against the counter again, glancing down at the linoleum like it held all the answers.

"He's… a little better. He still blames himself for what happened to May." The words left his mouth with a quiet weight, heavier than he meant. He wasn't sure if Jonah needed the details, or if he just needed someone to hear the truth out loud.

"Poor kid," Jonah muttered, more to himself than to Ben. He traced a finger along the edge of the coffee machine, absent-mindedly tapping a rhythm like he was trying to measure the universe in beats. "He's got the right people around him, though. That counts for something."

Ben nodded, feeling a pang in his chest.

"He will get through it. One day at a time." The truth was, he believed it, but believing didn't stop the panic in his stomach from bubbling up whenever he thought too hard. Every time he remembered May's laughter cut short, every time he saw Peter's hands clench when he thought no one was looking… it got heavier.

Jonah caught the tension without needing to ask. "Yeah," he said, voice low, almost cautious.

"He'll get there. He's lucky to have you."

Ben felt heat rise in his neck. He wasn't used to praise from Jonah—not like this, not without some cutting remark tacked on.

"Yeah, well… I'm lucky to be here, I guess," he said, forcing a light tone, brushing it off. "And besides…" He gave a half-smile, shrugging. "We both know it's not just me doing the heavy lifting."

Jonah's gaze softened, lingering on Ben in that way that made the world feel smaller for a second.

"I know. I've seen you handle worse."

Ben chuckled quietly, leaning a little more on the counter.

"I try not to think about it."

"Good idea," Jonah said with a sharp nod, and the flicker of a smile returned. "No reason to give yourself extra gray hairs."

Jonah finally leaned back fully, stretching his arms overhead with a grunt.

"So… think you'll survive the Bugle without spontaneously combusting?"

"Don't tempt fate," Ben said, grinning. "I might just set a fire somewhere, metaphorically speaking."

Jonah snorted.

"Yeah, I'll buy that. You've got the spark."

Jonah's eyes softened, the edges of his usual gruff demeanor giving way to something almost like pride.

"You're doing fine, Ben. Don't forget that."

Ben felt the words settle in, grounding him for just a moment. The day had been long, exhausting, chaotic, but these small exchanges reminded him why he had wanted this so badly. A place where he could learn, make mistakes, get better—and someone who actually believed he could.

He reached for his jacket again, sliding it over his shoulders fully this time.

"Well," he said, glancing toward the door, "think it's time we call it a night?"

Jonah's smirk returned, the edges of the familiar banter sliding back into place.

"Yeah, kid. You've survived your first day. That's an accomplishment in itself."

Ben laughed, shaking his head.

"Who are you calling 'kid?' You've got more gray than I do, old timer."

"I am still in my prime, Benjamin."

"Keep telling yourself that." Ben chuckled, heading towards the door.

The hallway felt quieter than the newsroom had, the fluorescent lights softening as they walked past empty desks and stacks of unsorted papers. Ben's phone buzzed in his pocket, pulling him out of the reflective bubble he'd been in. He pulled it out, saw Peter's name on the screen, and felt a pang of both relief and tension.

He hadn't expected the call so soon.

"Hey, kiddo. I'm just getting read—"

"Ben! Where are you?!" Peter's voice tore through the phone, high and jagged, carried along with the hiss of wind and the occasional scrape of something metallic. Ben froze mid-step, heart suddenly hammering.

"I'm at the Bugle still, getting ready to head home. Why what—"

"Stay there!"

Ben's brow furrowed. The word was clipped, desperate, impossible to ignore. He could hear it cut into the line, Peter's voice flaring in sharp bursts. The wind distorted it, making it sound like it was coming from a canyon instead of a handheld device.

"Peter, what's going on?" Ben asked, his voice low, trying to cut through the static. He moved a little closer to the wall near Jonah's office, where the signal felt steadier, but even then the words came in pieces.

"Stay where there's people! Okay?"

The calmness of the command startled him. That was Peter, always thinking, always trying to fix things—but panic was bleeding through it, slicing through the usual level-headedness. It made Ben's chest tighten.

"I—I'm at the Bugle. Jonah's here too. What is—"

"The Vultures… they aren't—! —waiting!"

Ben blinked, trying to parse it. Something about the phrasing didn't make sense. His stomach churned.

"Peter?" he pressed. "What are you saying? Who isn't waiting?"

"Ben! You're not listening!" Peter shouted, but the line wavered, trailing off again. The wind whipped harshly into the microphone, masking parts of his words. "Everything's—no, it's—it's moving! Faster! You don't—can't stay—"

Ben's grip tightened around the phone, knuckles white. He glanced at Jonah, whose expression was all sharp angles and concern, the man silently urging him to pay attention, to keep a level head.

"Peter, slow down! I can't understand you!" Ben raised his voice. His own panic was creeping up, but he forced it into urgency rather than chaos.

"They know! They know everything! Felicia—USB—it's not safe! You don't know—"

"Peter, focus! Who's not safe? Who knows what?"

"You… no! Everyone! Everything! You—you've been around! You don't understand! —MJ, Harry, Ben! Gwen! Flash! Norman!—I—can't—"

Ben swallowed hard, his pulse spiking. Hearing his own name in Peter's terrified voice made something clench deep in his chest. Not just fear—it was responsibility. He'd already promised to protect Peter, to be someone stable in the storm, and now it was breaking through like a tidal wave.

"Peter," he said, voice trembling slightly despite himself. "You need to slow down. I can't hear everything. Take a breath. Tell me. Slowly. Step by step."

The line was silent for a fraction of a second before Peter's voice flared again, clipped and raw.

"Ben! No time! You don't get it! They're—tracking everything! I—I didn't know! I thought I was keeping it—safe! But it's too late!" Peter's breathing was ragged, almost audible over the static. "Ben! You're all in danger! Everyone you've been around! I—I messed up—"

And then, over the wind and panic and static, the line went silent.

"Ben?" Jonah asked, as the man turned to face him. "Everything alright?"

"No, it's not."






Queens






MJ was curled up on the couch, knees drawn to her chest, phone clutched loosely in her hand. The quiet of the living room felt warm, the soft hum of the heater and the faint flicker of the lamp casting the familiar golden glow across the walls. For a moment, she let herself breathe, let herself sink into that rare feeling of safety. The homework she hadn't finished, the texts she hadn't answered, the noise of the outside world—they could all wait. For a few minutes, the chaos of life felt paused. Even the lingering worry about Peter was muted, softened at the edges by the comfort of this small, familiar space.

Her thumb hovered over the screen, scrolling absentmindedly through memes she didn't even fully read. A laugh bubbled up at one of them, small and private, a sound that felt almost foreign in the stillness. She let herself enjoy it for just a beat longer before her phone buzzed sharply on the side table. The vibration startled her, jarring against the quiet like a drumbeat in an empty hall. She glanced at the screen and froze.

It was Peter.

Her stomach flipped, a twisting coil of nerves that pulled tighter the closer she looked. She opened the message, reading it once, twice, three times, as if repeating it might make the panic retreat.

"MJ. Get somewhere safe. Take Anna. Now!"

Her chest constricted. The words were short, urgent, jagged with fear. Panic unspooled in her mind, threading through every memory she had of Peter being in danger, of him hurting… She felt the warmth of the living room drain, replaced by a prickling chill that settled deep in her bones.

The phone trembled in her hand. Her first instinct was to argue, to resist, to demand more information. But she couldn't. Not when she knew Peter's voice—no, his presence—was threaded through the warning behind the words. He was scared, she realized, far more than he usually let on. And that fear, unfiltered and raw, carried weight she couldn't ignore.

MJ swallowed hard, standing up slowly. Every movement felt deliberate, like she had to will herself to obey. She needed to move, needed to act, but her feet were leaden with a weight that had nothing to do with gravity. Her eyes flicked to the living room door, the familiar route to safety, but then she caught something out of the corner of her eye. Something small, dark, impossible, resting on the porch just outside the window.

Her stomach sank. She didn't move immediately, her feet frozen where they were. Something about it felt… wrong. Her heart began to hammer, echoing in her ears louder than the soft hum of the heater. She tilted her head, the golden light spilling across the floor, and the shape sharpened into clarity.

A black feather.

Her breath caught. Just one. But she knew. Oh, she knew.

It wasn't the color that made her freeze, though that mattered, a darkness that seemed to swallow the dim light around it. It wasn't even the texture, delicate yet jagged, like it had been ripped from something alive, something fast, something dangerous. It was the memory it carried, heavy and unwilling to fade.

She remembered that night—her body had tensed, the air thick and metallic around her.

Her stomach plummeted into a pit of icy dread, her pulse rising in staccato bursts, each beat matching the panic that was clawing up her throat.

She pressed her hands to the glass, unwilling to touch it, unwilling to really step outside, but drawn in by the memory, by the undeniable fact that danger had once more found them. Her breath fogged the window as she leaned in, the small tremor of her fingers betraying her attempt at composure. She could see the feather clearly now, a dark, sharp line against the muted wood of the porch floor, the wind nudging it just slightly as if testing her resolve.

Her mind raced. She should run. She should call someone. She should scream. She should do anything but stand there like a statue, frozen between fear and disbelief. Her eyes darted back to the phone only momentarily.

A sound in the kitchen—soft, familiar—reminded her she wasn't completely alone. Aunt Anna. She was just there, quietly doing whatever it was adults did when they didn't realize the world had suddenly tilted. MJ's lips pressed together, and she whispered, the word trembling and small:

"Aunt Anna!"

The sound of it made the fear spike again, the urgency climbing higher. Every instinct screamed at her to move, to pull Anna to safety, to make the world right again in some tiny, defiant way. She glanced back once more at the feather. Her joy from the quiet evening—the warmth of home, the fleeting moment of peace, the small laugh she had shared with herself—had dissolved entirely. What was left was the pulse of dread, sharp and insistent, that told her the city was no longer safe, that her home was no longer a sanctuary, that Peter was in danger and somehow, in some way, she had to help keep herself and Anna from becoming collateral.

Her hands tightened around her phone. The room smelled like old upholstery and the faint residue of whatever lunch Anna had forgotten on the counter. It smelled like normal life, like the life she could barely cling to anymore. But the feather, black and cold, reminded her that the normal world had cracked, and the shadow of what had come for Peter could reach inside even here.

She swallowed the lump in her throat and stepped back from the window, trying to force her legs to move, forcing her mind to catch up with her racing heart. Every step felt slow and heavy, but she forced herself to the door, each movement a careful, determined act against the fear that threatened to root her to the floor. The feather remained, lying in eerie stillness, a silent messenger of the chaos beyond the glass.

Never once knowing that resting on the roof of the Parker's house was that of Adrian Toomes, watching with malicious intent.

The boy will come… but I will have feasted by then. I was hoping to make him watch, but this will suffice.

His eyes flashed red, and he was gone… the sound of shattering glass following like thunder.







TO BE CONTINUED...



AN: Well, well, well... here we go again, ladies and gentlemen. This particular turn of events was not planned. I'm not going to say much, because I don't want to give anything away. First things first: thank you for 250 reviews on FF. That's made my day!

Secondly... We are close to the homestretch with the Vulture arc. I want to get this finished in the next month if I'm lucky enough. That being said, the ending of this arc is going to take the gloves off. While yes, the only real deaths in the story so far have been Obadiah Stane and May Parker, things are about to get heavy. I once said that the true catalyst of this universe taking off has yet to come. This? Well, we're in the beginning of that catalyst.

I have plans to keep this story going for at least five books at this rate, and frankly we're not even halfway done with book 1 just yet. There's still so much I want to do with this, that this could very well last for another ten years. It's hard to contemplate that, but yeah... it's definitely something that will last for a long time!

Villains currently planned for Absolute Spidey in the next years are as goes:

Morbius, Hammerhead, Iron Monger, Beetle, Fisk, Rhino, Sandman, Jackal, Tombstone, Lizard, Carnage, Overdrive, Chameleon, Electro, Doctor Octopus, and the Green Goblin.

That's not the official listing of when they'll appear either. These are just key villains I want to explore. This is to change as we go, obviously.

If by chance you want to see more of the story, I do have a Patreon where you can get anywhere from 5 to 10 chapters early access for the story (this will become 10 later on once I get my writing schedule for the year sorted). It is the same username, Arsenal597. You can see artwork, side content, and more. Want to join the discord? Link will be below.

As always, let me know what you think of the chapter, and I'll be back as soon as I can with the next chapter! Until then, I'll catch you all later.



Council Members:


Benediktus


THIS STORY IS CROSS POSTED ON AO3, FF, AND QQ.


discord.gg/dQkeJPkxdD
 
Thanks for the chapters
Web Weaver better go save your girlfriend MJ Watson from Red Vulture.
Very Impressive ambitious man for Absolute Spider-Man 5 books author San , color me impressed .
Looking forward to more of your work with Absolute Spider-Man adventures with twists and turns he saw coming out the left field and some he didn't.
The super villains list might definitely appear out of order and subject to change in the future.
Continue on
Cheers!
 

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