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Chapter 31: The First Web New
The worst part about everything running through my head right now? I'm thinking clearly. There's no hesitation, no second-guessing — I meant what I said to Norman. I want to kill Vulture. I want to kill the bastard, tear him apart until all that's left of him is paste and feathers on the sidewalk. If I had my way, I'd make him suffer in the way his previous victims suffered until he was begging me for the mercy he never gave.

But then, there's the fact the man beneath it, Adrian Toomes, is suffering. He was the one who begged me to kill him that night on the street.

"Do it… before I hurt anyone else."

The words echo in the back of my head as I lean in front of the computer, analyzing the glue from Trapster. I just need to know what piece I'm missing for the web formula, then I can start acting like Spider-Man.

"You say you want to act like Spider-Man, yet you're willing to kill? That doesn't sound right," Peter pipes in as I sit down in the chair. "We talked about this, remember? It's not what she would have wanted."

Yes, Peter. We've had this talk how many times now? If you were in my position, you'd want to kill him too.

"I want him to pay for what he did. I'm just saying, is killing him the right course of action?"

Right course of action? Pete, no offense but what makes it the right course of action? Let's say I stop him, take him in alive. If he breaks out again and hurts anyone else, that's on me for not putting a permanent stop to it.

"You're not judge, jury, and executioner."

No, I'm not. But there's times where the law isn't going to work.

"What about Dr. Connors in most iterations, huh? Should Spider-Man have killed him to prevent the Lizard from going on another rampage? Was trying to cure him the wrong thing to do?"

Jesus. It's not like that. Dr. Connors' situation was an entirely different case. The whole thing with Connors was that he was a good man that was corrupted by his work. He could be brought back from the brink, and the good he did to make up for the crimes he committed as the Lizard made up for it.

It's not the same thing, Peter. You heard what Norman said. His DNA is corrupted, damaged on a cellular level. He is dying as it is. All I'd be doing is putting him out of his misery.

"That's hypocritical, and you know it." Peter scoffed. I could practically imagine him shaking his head at me. "You can't just make a judgment call like that. That's not how we do this."

How exactly are we supposed to do this, then? Am I supposed to have you as my conscience, telling me right from wrong? I can't just let Vulture have that opportunity to hurt anyone else!

"That's not the problem. You're acting as though Adrian's fate is sealed."

And as I said… if I can reach him, I will. But if I can't bring him back from the brink, I'm going to put an end to him. At the end of this, the Vulture is going to die one way or another.

"There's no getting through to you right now."

I slam my fist down on the table, breaking a chunk off with ease. My breathing becomes ragged. I want Peter to stop talking, but at the same time I know he has a point.

"You can't say you need to learn to pull your punches so you don't kill people, only to turn around and try to kill someone intentionally."

Standing up, I walk across the room to the workbench. I had another idea for something that would help give me an edge over Vulture in a fight. My webs are going to be useful, but his claws are sharp enough he'll likely be able to cut through them with ease.

"What the hell is this?" Peter asks, but I shake my head. I'm done listening to him for a bit. It's time for me to get to work. "You're really going to ignore me now? That's mature."

This is going to be something that I rarely use, but I think in the long run it's going to be a boon with certain enemies. Had the idea come to me in a dream a few nights ago when the first web succeeded. I used to play the Batman: Arkham games all the time when I was about sixteen. I can't even tell you how many hours I had in that series — but what came to me in the dream was a beautiful combination of Spidey web-slinging meets the Batclaw.

The idea itself came from a dream about my fight with Vulture. It sounds stupid to say that, but I dream about it every couple of nights when it's not a nightmare about May. That sounds like it'd go hand-in-hand, but it doesn't. The fight itself brought something out of me that I never knew was there. Because of my weaker bones as a kid and my family's financial status, I didn't get to do much that would give me an adrenaline rush. About the closest I ever got to feeling that kind of rush or freedom was the quadrunner I had when I was fourteen. It made me feel like I could do anything — that I wasn't fragile or weak. For once in my life, I felt good. I felt normal.

That fight with Vulture, beyond what he did to May, gave me a similar sense of adrenaline. I liked fighting him — the danger that came with it. I didn't have to hold back. I wasn't afraid of breaking myself or hurting anyone else. I just wanted to feel everything in that moment. Does that make me crazy?

Anyway, I didn't think the idea was going to come to fruition, but Shocker and Trapster gave me an idea of exactly what I needed for this. Oh, this is going to be good if I can pull it off.

Now, designing a tool based on a video game is one thing, but doing it purely on memory is another. Thankfully, my brain is processing on a much higher level than I used to, so I can fill in the blanks.

Here's the thing: I had Vulture where I wanted him when I pierced him with the chain in that warehouse. Did it go according to plan? No, but that was with loose, rusty chains. I don't plan on letting him get the jump on me this time. The web fluid is only one of the tools I want at my disposal.

I need to be able to keep a hold of Vulture without fear of the line being cut, or him breaking free of it with ease. If he does, I want him to pay for it. That's where the Batclaw function came in. I distinctly remember three metal 'claws' that all faced forward until fired. Once it hit its target, the claws would open up to catch on like a metal grate. Which is y'know, great, if I was trying to pull a metal grate out of the wall. I'm trying to hook onto living flesh. That means it's gotta be able to tear through him, much like the chain did that night.

So, here's what I'm thinking. Two gauntlets that I can wear, probably design it to look visually similar to the MCU Iron Spider webshooters. Each one fires a claw at a high speed, piercing through the target. Once it cuts through, the prongs open up and prevent the target from simply removing it. I'll make it where I can retract the prongs, and increase the power of the winch I'd need in the motors. Shit, that's going to be fun.

If you had asked me a few years ago to do something technical like this, I'd probably be reluctant to do it. Now, it's like a dream come true and the possibilities are calling me to action.

Some of this I might need Smythe's help with. I don't care for him, but if anyone's worth calling a tech wiz, it's him.

I spent the next couple hours doing some metalworking and tests to make the shell. Measurements were a bitch to do myself, but I made it work after a few tries. They're going to be bulkier than what I'd like, but it's a necessary compromise; making it to where the Spider-Talons (I really need to come up with a better name) can fit comfortably with the web shooters without causing any detrimental issues is key. While I'm able to do the double-tap to the palm to fire a web, the talons are going to need a different trigger.

The webs firing from underneath my palm is fine. The talons I can fire from the top of my wrist. It'll be similar to how some iterations of the symbiote suit shot the webs. Now, how am I going to come up with a suitable trigger that isn't going to conflict with the web shooters? It'll need to be something I can't accidentally do, causing it to go off randomly.

Nah, I need something precise. A button on the side of a finger could suffice, given I can prime it to react only when there's the right pressure and contact. Double tap for the web shooters, why not a double tap for the talons as well?

The winch is another issue I'll need to figure out. It's already going to be a bulky gauntlet because it needs to conform with the web shooters, but the wires are going to have to extend greatly beyond twenty to thirty feet. How the hell am I going to make it compact enough? I could look into different wires with high tensile strength, see which one is the thinnest yet maintains the strength I'm looking for.

If it were anyone else trying to wear these, I think it might be too much. I'm not sure I can get the weight down by much, but that's the perks of having superhuman strength.

The metal shavings start to pile up on the floor like glitter from a craft store explosion. I've been at this long enough that my eyes are burning, and the buzz in the back of my skull feels like a vibrating phone that won't shut up. Still, I keep going. I need the outer shell right. If the foundation's trash, the rest of the design's going to collapse on itself before I even get to the wiring.

I sketch the outline again—third attempt, maybe fourth—trying to account for the extra bulk of the winch without sacrificing the range of motion for the web shooters. The gauntlet has to sit flush with the shooter casing; otherwise, I'm gonna snap my wrist the first time I try to web-swing and fire a talon at the same time. That'd be embarrassing. And painful. Mostly embarrassing.

"Dude, that looks like a toaster wrapped around your arm," Peter mutters somewhere behind my consciousness.

It kinda does, yeah.

I don't dignify him with a response. I'm too busy re-checking the curvature around the radial bone. I have to file part of it down because it keeps catching when I flex my hand. The grinding wheel screams every time it touches metal, and it echoes in the lab, bouncing around the empty space like there's ten of me instead of one.

God, this would be so much easier with a proper 3D modeler, or even some engineering software that isn't calibrated to Oscorp's insane system permissions. But nope. I'm doing this freehand like some caveman.

"Y'know," Peter says again, quieter this time, like he's not sure if he should keep going, "you're pushing yourself too hard."

I swallow that comment down and keep filing.

The metal edge smooths out nicely.

Piece by piece, the gauntlet starts to look less like garbage and more like something intentional. Something functional. The top casing fits snugly over the back of my hand, leaving room for the web-shooter's nozzle beneath my palm. I lift my wrist, flex it, imagine the weight of everything once the winch is installed. It's clunky, but not unwieldy.

The real headache is housing the talon mechanism on top while keeping the web shooter clear underneath. I set the prototype down, lean back, and rub the bridge of my nose. My fingers are shaking a little—not from nerves, just from hours of constant tool work. Every muscle in my forearm is buzzing.

"Maybe you should… I dunno… take a break?" Peter suggests, his tone cautious, like he thinks I'll snap at him.

I don't. I'm too tired for anger. Too tired for anything except stubbornness.

"I'll break when this actually looks like something I'd trust in a fight," I mutter under my breath.

I grab the talon housing again and angle it toward the work lamp. In my head, I can see exactly how it's supposed to slide cleanly into place, like puzzle pieces that were meant for each other. Reality, unfortunately, disagrees.

I adjust the bracket again. And again. Then again, because the first two adjustments threw the whole alignment off.

This is what I get for trying to reinvent the Batclaw from memory at four in the morning.

The wires are spread out across the bench like a bowl of uncooked spaghetti. High tensile steel variants, braided microfiber cables, this weird carbon-thread stuff I don't even remember pulling from storage. I'm trying to see which one gives me the best strength-to-thickness ratio. I'm not optimistic.

"Maybe you could… y'know… ask someone for help?" Peter says, sounding sheepish.

I snort.

"I'm trying to not ask for help, Pete." I say out loud. There's nobody else here so I won't get looked at like I'm insane. "Spider-Man is supposed to make his own gear. I can't expect to rely on everyone else."

"You hit a bump in the road that you can't figure out on your own. That's not something to be ashamed of."

"No, but I'm supposed to be Peter Parker! I have the brain of one of the smartest people on Earth, and I can't figure out a stupid fucking mechanism!"

"Hey!" For a split second, I swear I can feel his hand on my shoulder. "Take it easy. You've been up all night. You were shot and thrown around. Even with your abilities, that takes a toll. If you don't get sleep, you're not going to be able to figure anything out."

"Yeah, yeah — easy for you to say." I mumble, rubbing my eyes with the heel of my hand. "You're not the one trying to combine three different inventions at once while running on, what, two hours of sleep?"

"Yeah, well… I'm also not the one who's gonna pass out face-first on a soldering iron if he keeps pushing."

As much as I'd like to say otherwise, he's got a point. While my powers let me run on less sleep, I still need to be able to get some rest now and then. If I don't, my body is going to retaliate — but I can't stop yet.

The gauntlet's inner frame sits on the workbench, taunting me. Every time I stare at it too long, it looks more like a middle school science fair project built by a kid who forgot it was due until the night before. I pick up one of the carbon-thread wires—thin as dental floss, strong enough to hold a truck if I braid it right.

The moment I loop it through the pulley housing, the whole thing slips, nearly taking the bracket with it.

I slap my hand down to catch it before it hits the floor. My palm stings from the impact.

"Great," I hiss. "Awesome. Perfect start."

"You need to breathe," Peter says gently. "Just… slow down."

"Can't." I push the bracket back into place. "I need the frame set before I can even think about the internals. And if I end up taking this to Smythe for help, I need the internals done that way he doesn't think I'm incompetent."

"You're not incompetent," he fires back immediately.

"Try telling that to the part of my brain that's screaming I'm wasting time."

I reposition the talon housing, checking the alignment with the web-shooter mount. The overlap is microscopic, but it's there—just enough that, if I don't fix it, I'll end up jamming the firing mechanism the first time I try to launch a talon, or worse… I'll lose a hand in a bloody explosion of webbing.

I exhale slowly. My breath shudders.

"There has to be a way to slim this down," I mutter. "If I adjust the top casing angle by maybe three degrees, I could probably embed the pulley inside the shell instead of on top of it. It'd free up space. But then the wiring has to route under the stabilizer instead of over it, which—"

"Peter!" his voice cuts in again, stopping me. "Just take a break. You've done enough for the night. Go home and get some rest, you can take it to Smythe after school."

I drag both hands down my face and let them hang uselessly at my sides for a second. My shoulders ache; my back aches; even my teeth kinda ache. Stress does weird things to your body.

The room feels huge and empty in a way that isn't comforting. I was hoping the quiet would help me think. Instead, it just makes everything louder inside my head.

I sink onto the rolling stool and let out a breath that feels way too loud in the stillness. The half-built gauntlet stares back at me, unimpressed.

"Pete… what am I missing?" I ask the empty air, barely above a whisper.

"Exhaustion does funny things to people. You know as well as I do that it can be as simple as an easy fix, but if you're not resting… you'll never see it."

He's right. As much as I hate to admit it, I've hit my limit for the night. I run a hand through my hair, silently admitting defeat to the Spider-Talons.

I look around—tools scattered everywhere, metal fragments on the floor, sketches layered over sketches. It's a mess. I'm a mess. But the shell is—well, not complete, but close. The shape is right. The form is there.

The function will come with help. As much as I hate that.

I'm reaching for the light switch when a soft ding chimes from behind me.

I freeze.

You've gotta be fucking kidding me.

On the computer screen, the analysis bar that felt like it was moving at glacial speed all night finally hits 100%. A new window pops up, text loading line by line. Trapster's glue sample is done.

Of course it finishes right as I decide to leave.

Peter murmurs, "You're kidding me…"

"Nope." I rub my face with both hands. "Of course it's now."

The clock in the corner of the screen reads 4:03 AM.

I should be going home. I should be sleeping. I should be doing literally anything besides diving into another brain-numbing process that's going to eat up the next hour or two.

But I can't leave yet.

Trapster's glue might hold the missing piece for the web formula. And if it does… that changes everything.

I step toward the monitor, exhaustion forgotten for the moment, heart picking up speed.

"Alright," I mutter. "Let's see what we've got."

The analysis window finishes loading, line by line, the chemical structure building itself on the screen in slow, teasing pieces. I lean closer, eyes burning, brain humming like a pissed-off beehive. Trapster's glue sample scrolls into view—dense, hyper-bonded, beautifully engineered. I'm too tired to appreciate it fully, but even in my half-delirious state, I can admit it: the guy knows what he's doing.

Doc and I already cracked the foundation of the web formula, but it refused to hold tension. The lines sagged like Christmas lights no matter what polymer ratio I tried. The compound needed something that could bind while actively resisting slippage, a molecular self-tightening effect.

My whole body feels like it's been stuffed with static, but underneath it there's this bone-deep exhaustion waiting to drag me to the floor the second the high fades.

As I scroll through the adhesive profile, I see it. A stabilizing chain reaction. A micro-lattice response to stretching force.

My breath catches. Then it hits me like a truck.

"OH MY GOD—"

It explodes out of me before I can stop it. I slam my hands on the desk and scream so loud it echoes off the walls like a banshee trapped in a tin can.

Peter's voice laughs somewhere in my skull—quiet, relieved, amused.

"Dude… congratulations?"

I don't answer. I'm already grabbing my notebook, flipping through pages, cross-referencing the old equations. My exhaustion evaporates like someone cracked open a window in my brain. I scribble down the lattice structure, adjust the bonding agent, recalibrate the compression ratio—and everything clicks into place like the universe finally decided to throw me a bone.

My hands are shaking when I reach for the mixing tools.

This is it.

This is the missing piece.

I pull the ingredients together—racing, pouring, measuring with the kind of precision that feels less like math and more like instinct. My body moves on autopilot, chasing the formula before my mind even processes the steps. The beaker hisses when I mix the new stabilizer in, the compound shifting color, thickening, tightening on itself like it's alive.

"Come on, come on, come on—" I whisper, watching it settle.

The surface ripples once, then stills.

Perfect.

I rush the cartridge-loading process, nearly dropping the damn thing twice, and shove the fresh cylinder into the left web shooter. It locks in with a satisfying, solid click.

I swear my heart stops.

The test target sits across the lab—just a reinforced foam panel Otto built for impact experiments. I raise my wrist.

"Here goes everything," I mutter.

Thwip.

The web fires like lightning across the room.

It slams into the target with a sound I've never heard from my prototypes before. A brutal, solid WHAP that echoes through the room. The line doesn't sag.

My jaw drops.

"NO WAY—"

I yank my arm to test the tension, and the foam target lifts off the ground as it comes towards me.

Catching it, I whirl around in a full circle, grinning like a maniac.

"FUCKING FINALLY!"

The feeling that goes through me is beyond euphoric. It's something I've never quite felt before. I'm smiling so hard it genuinely hurts. I can't remember the last time I've been this happy, which is a problem in its own right, but holy shit. I'm actually able to shoot webs.

I made the Web Shooters.

I pause for a second, looking down at the prototypes… and it finally hits me appropriately.

I JUST MADE THE WEB SHOOTERS!

Man, if only ten-year-old me could see this, he'd be freaking out. Hell, I'm tempted to pinch myself to make sure I'm not dreaming. For the next few minutes, I let out the excitement through borderline manic laughter and bouncing around like a kid in a candy shop.

I'm still laughing under my breath when the high finally steadies enough for me to think actual thoughts again. The target's on the floor next to my feet, and I already know I need more of this before I can walk away for the night.

"Alright," I murmur, raising my arm again. "Let's go."

The next shot is a clean hit. Just as the one after that, and the one after that. Each shot slaps into the panels with that same vicious, perfect impact. I start playing with distance — five feet, ten, twenty. I test with different angles, quick taps, and full trigger pulls. I even try to catch Otto's clipboard midair, and it zips straight into my palm.

"This seems a bit excessive for a test." Peter chuckles in the back of my head, but I can't help it. This is too much fun and the amount of stress that damn formula put on my shoulders — just damn.

"Really? Doesn't seem like it to me!"

I keep going for about twenty more shots. My body is itching for action, and suddenly the idea hits me… Web Swinging.

The moment I hit the doors, I have to stop myself. I shouldn't be doing this right now. When it comes to web-swinging, that's incredibly dangerous. I already have stitches from the bullet earlier, and I'm running on fumes. Mixing fatigue and web-swinging might not be a good idea right now.

Besides, I'd really like to have Doc here for further testing. He's half of the reason it exists. So, with that thought in mind… I think it's time to head home at last.

Well, okay — not right this second, because I'm going to do preparation. When I do come back tomorrow and Doc's hopefully around to get some proper testing in, I don't want to have to waste the time preparing more web fluid.

It's like the cardinal rule of Spider-Manning: Never run out of web fluid.

Surprisingly, that's come up more than I would have thought it might. Every cartoon I've watched with Spider-Man in it has had that problem pop up on occasion. Hell, I think that's why I was hoping to develop organic webbing, but I'm more than happy to be teched out.

Once I'm back at the workbench, I go through the process of making more web fluid, filling twenty cartridges. Ten of them go into the utility belt for safekeeping, while the other ten are split between the two web shooters. Five sit neatly into the reload carousel. I think once I refine the prototype, I might be able to make it automatically reload. It should be simple enough, but I want to make the overall size a little more compact before I try doing anything like that.

I could make more, but it seems like a waste to create so much. The cartridge should be able to maintain the fluid, but I don't have a clue on the proverbial shelf life.

Shit, with that chemical from Trapster's glue I don't know how long until the webbing dissolves now. When Doc and I tested it, the web would last about an hour.

I crack a small smile. Guess I'm taking the web shooters home with me to test the web's life once exposed to air.

With that said, it's time to head home. I shut the light off on the way out, but I make sure to leave the Spider-Talons in view. Smythe's gonna want to see that when I come in. His twisted mind would probably come up with some fun ideas for implementing them with his S-Bots.

I could have taken the sidewalk to get home, but with my costume technically being on, the rooftops were a safer option. When I finally get home, Ben's still asleep thankfully. It gives me a chance to slip out of the costume and hide my stitches. Sitting down on the bed, I can see the clock out of the corner of my eye. It's five in the morning. I'll have to be up by seven-thirty if I want to get to school on time. Shit.

Two hours of sleep? Sounds like a plan.




Two hours later…



Rain descended upon Manhattan, shrouding it in a haze of gray as Felicia stepped into the stairwell off of the rooftop. She should have already gone into Norman's penthouse and gotten what she needed, but Norman appeared to be homebound these days since stepping out of the spotlight. That made this more difficult, but not impossible.

Norman had to leave sometime. According to the schedule she had pieced together, he should be leaving with his son this morning. Now she just had to wait for the right moment to pounce.

She eased the heavy stairwell door shut behind her, careful to keep the hinge from clicking. The concrete was cold through the soles of her boots, the faint vibration of traffic below humming up through the bones of the building.

Felicia leaned her shoulder into the wall and slowly rolled the tension out of her neck. Her hood was still up, shadowing most of her face, but once she was settled into position, she reached up and pushed it back. Cool air hit her scalp, damp from sweat. She ran both hands through her hair, fingers catching briefly before smoothing it back into place.

She was exhausted.

It clung to her in layers—behind the eyes, in the ache of her shoulders, in the way her limbs felt just a fraction heavier than they should've. Sleep had become a negotiation these past weeks. Short, fractured, and always paid for in nightmares. Every time she closed her eyes for too long, she heard wings again. That deep, ugly sound that didn't belong to anything natural. A vibration that rattled up from the bottom of her memory and refused to stay buried.

She shifted her weight, boot scraping faintly against the concrete. The stairwell smelled like wet dust and rusted metal, the kind of stale damp that never really went away no matter how high the building climbed. Somewhere below, a door slammed. Voices echoed faintly through the hollow spine of the tower, then faded.

Felicia pulled her knees up slightly and rested her forearms across them, forcing herself to stay still. Stillness was part of the job. Always had been. But lately it felt louder. Every pause gave her mind room to wander—and her mind had not been a safe place to wander since the Archive.

She closed her eyes for just a second.

Wings.

Stone.

Claws tearing through concrete like it was paper.

Her jaw tightened. She opened her eyes again, the city bleeding back into view through the narrow stairwell window. Rain streaked down the glass in uneven lines, turning the skyline into something warped and impressionistic. Neon bled into gray. Headlights smeared into long, trembling ribbons far below.

Safe. For now, she reminded herself. You're safe right now.

The thought didn't stick the way it used to.

She reached into the inner pocket of her jacket and pulled out the binoculars, letting them rest against her thigh for the moment. The weight of them was reassuring. Solid. Real. Something she could use. Somewhere to anchor herself that wasn't her own spiraling head.

God, she was tired.

Tired of running between half-abandoned safehouses.

Tired of burner phones and dead drops.

Tired of sleeping with one eye half-open and her hand never more than inches from a blade.

And underneath all of it—tired of not knowing where her father was.

Her thumb brushed the edge of Walter's old phone through the fabric of her jacket. A useless habit, maybe. But it grounded her. Reminded her why she was freezing on a staircase instead of somewhere warm and asleep like a sane person.

"You better be worth it," she murmured under her breath, the words lost instantly to the hollow acoustics.

Minutes stretched. Rain drummed steadily against the building. Somewhere above her, the penthouse lights glowed faintly through tinted glass, softened by distance and weather. A life of quiet luxury hidden just beyond reinforced walls and private elevators. Norman's chosen kind of fortress.

Felicia shifted again, flexing her fingers inside her gloves. There was a faint tremor in them—equal parts cold and nerves. She hated waiting. Always had. Waiting meant thinking, and thinking meant remembering.

She lifted the binoculars and brought them to her eyes.

The world snapped closer. Windows sharpened. Raindrops streaked across the lenses in tiny, distorted lines. She scanned the upper levels of the tower methodically, one floor at a time, committing patterns to memory. Curtains drawn. Curtains open. A shadow shifting behind glass. Nothing out of place.

She lowered them and exhaled slowly.

The feeling that she was being watched crept up her spine again—subtle, persistent, like a phantom hand between her shoulder blades. She'd felt it on rooftops. In alleyways. In safehouses she'd thought were airtight. It never announced itself. Just lingered.

Paranoia, she told herself.

Probably.

Still, her eyes flicked to the stairwell door behind her. Closed. Still. No shadows slipping beneath the crack. No sound of approaching footsteps.

She faced forward again, forcing her shoulders to loosen. If someone was hunting her up here, she'd know soon enough. The building didn't offer many places to hide without making noise.

Another slow breath.

Time dragged.

Her thoughts drifted, uninvited, back to the Archive. To the way the air had felt wrong down there—thick with chemicals and old secrets. To the sound of that creature's wings beating against the chamber walls. To the look in Jackal's eyes when he thought he had her cornered. Curious. Reverent. Like he was standing in front of a miracle instead of a crime scene.

Felicia clenched her jaw until it ached.

If Norman was tied to any piece of that—financing it, enabling it, hiding it—then she was about to crawl straight into the heart of something that made Oscorp's labs look like a science fair. And she'd be doing it alone.

The rain intensified, drumming harder against the building. Wind tugged at stray strands of her hair, cold and insistent. She welcomed the sting. It kept her present.

Another few minutes passed.

Then—

Movement.

Felicia brought the binoculars up again instantly.

The penthouse's private elevator vestibule lit up inside, the glow spilling through the tall window beside the doors. A shadow crossed it. Then another. The elevator chimed faintly, too distant for sound but unmistakable in the shift of light and motion.

Her pulse ticked up.

She adjusted the focus with careful precision, breath held as the shapes sharpened.

The doors slid open.

First came security—two men in dark coats, moving with the kind of practiced awareness that never relaxed. One stepped out and scanned the balcony through the glass before giving a subtle nod.

Then Norman emerged.

Even from this distance, there was no mistaking him. The posture. The silver at his temples. The slow, measured way he moved, as though every step carried more weight than it used to. He leaned briefly on a cane before straightening, his coat pulled tight against the rain.

A second figure followed close behind him.

Harry.

Felicia's grip tightened on the binoculars.

The two paused just inside the overhang as an attendant stepped forward with an umbrella. Norman accepted it with a brief word she couldn't hear. Harry said nothing, hands shoved into his pockets, gaze fixed somewhere out over the city as if he didn't quite want to be here.

The security detail shifted into motion, forming up around them as they moved toward the waiting car.

Felicia lowered the binoculars slowly, a thin, sharp smile tugging at the corner of her mouth despite everything tightening in her chest.

Finally…

She drew her hood back up in one smooth motion and pushed off the wall, muscles coiling beneath her skin.

Showtime.




Meanwhile…




I woke up to the sound of my alarm beeping in my ear, a groan escaping my throat as I flailed for my phone. Did I say two hours was enough sleep? Wrong. So, so wrong. My brain felt like it had been tossed in a cement mixer, and my shoulder throbbed faintly where the bullet had grazed it last night.

Dragging myself out of bed, I shuffled to the bathroom. The mirror greeted me with a pale, tousled version of myself that I barely recognized. Hair sticking up in every direction, eyes bloodshot, dark circles forming crescents under them—it was not a good look. I turned the shower on and let the hot water hit me. The warmth helped, loosening my muscles, waking me up slowly. I scrubbed my hair, flexing my shoulder gently under the spray, testing movement. No new pain. That was a small victory.

After what felt like a half-hour but was probably more like ten minutes, I stepped out, toweling off and slipping into clothes that weren't wrinkled beyond recognition. Breakfast could wait, but I knew Ben would already be downstairs.

Sure enough, when I stepped into the kitchen, he was there, shaking his head with that familiar mix of exasperation and affection.

"You're cutting it close today, slugger," he said, sliding a plate of eggs and toast toward me.

"Sorry, I was up late," I mumbled, rubbing my eyes in between bites.

"I noticed," he said, raising an eyebrow. "After we got your suit together, you took off pretty fast. How'd it go?"

I hesitated, thinking back to last night—the armored truck, Shocker slamming me against the cab, my shoulder screaming in protest. I flexed instinctively where the bullet wound had been.

"Uh… stopped a robbery last night. I actually figured out a way to make sure I minimize injuries, for both myself and the… 'bad guys,' so to speak."

Ben gave me a long look, like he could see everything I wasn't saying, and that made my stomach tighten.

"Just be careful, kiddo. Now, you better hurry if you want to get to school on time."

I started packing my bag, still glancing at him.

"What are you doing today?"

"Got an interview at the Daily Bugle," he said casually, like it wasn't a big deal.

"The Daily Bugle?" I echoed, surprised.

"The editor is an old friend of mine from school. He's a good man."

"Why… why are you going to an interview? You're retired," I said, flopping into a chair as my hands shook slightly from last night's adrenaline and lack of sleep.

Ben gave a soft sigh.

"I know… I know. It's just… I can't stay at home. Before, when I had May to keep me company, it wasn't so bad. But the truth is… I haven't been myself in a while, Peter. Sitting here, worrying about you, regardless of whether I knew about your powers or not… it's not doing either of us any good. I need to be able to pay the bills once we get back to the house."

I frowned.

"Norman said he's taking care of things."

"And I appreciate that," Ben replied firmly, "but I'm not going to spend the rest of my life taking handouts from Norman. I need to do this on my own."

"I get it," I said quietly. "I just… I don't want you overexerting yourself. You've done enough already."

Ben waved me off.

"We all have our battles, kid. You've got yours, I've got mine. And hey, speaking of battles…" He smirked faintly, though it didn't quite reach his eyes. "Try not to get shot again before lunch, yeah?"

"Wait, how'd you know that I-" I paused, touching my shoulder. I didn't leave my compression shirt out for him to see, so how did he know?

"Norman was kind enough to let me know that you stopped by the Tower last night. Said you needed a gunshot wound patched up. How bad is it?"

"It's not bad. Should be healed up by the end of the day." I smile softly.

"You're healing quicker every day."

"Yeah, I noticed it too." I nod. "I'm just happy knowing I can take a beating and get back up."

"Maybe avoid getting beat up in the first place?"

I rolled my eyes but couldn't suppress a small grin.

"No promises."

He chuckled, the sound warm and grounding.

"Alright, well, I'll let you go. School won't wait, and you need to be awake enough to remember your own name before someone asks for homework answers."

I laughed, a short, tired sound, and grabbed my backpack.

"Thanks, Ben."

With that, I rushed for the door. Something I hadn't told Ben was that I had the costume and the web shooters in my bag, just in case. I'd have liked to test the web shooters this morning, but I cut my time too short. Now I need to get moving.

I closed the apartment door behind me and paused in the hallway, letting the morning light filter in through the narrow window beside the stairwell. Manhattan was waking up slowly—the hum of traffic muted beneath the steady drum of rain, occasional splashes from puddles on the street below, the distant rumble of a train somewhere underground. I leaned against the wall and let the gray light wash over me. For a moment, I just smiled.

From my bag, I pulled out the mask, fingers tracing its familiar contours. That little piece of cloth and plastic carried more than just anonymity—it was freedom, a key to a part of me I couldn't touch anywhere else. I glanced down the hall—empty. Good. The coast was clear.

Sliding the window open, I felt the rain immediately slap my cheeks, cool and insistent, soaking the edge of my hair. One step, two steps, and I vaulted through the opening, landing lightly on the fire escape. Water hissed where my boots met metal, and the slick surface made me shift my balance instinctively. No matter. The city was alive, wet and slick and dangerous, and I loved it.

Putting the mask on, I leapt off the fire escape and into the city.

I landed on the next rooftop, boots slipping slightly on the slick brick, and barely caught myself against the edge. Rain soaked through my jacket and plastered my hair against my forehead, dripping down into the mask. The fabric clung to my skin, heavy and cold, but I didn't stop. Every movement—every vault, every push-off—felt precise, instinctive, like the city was an extension of my body.

Traffic glimmered far below, headlights smeared by rain, people hunched under umbrellas, oblivious to the blur of masked motion above them. I vaulted over a low wall, spun midair, and landed on a slanted roof, adjusting instantly for the slick surface. The mask shifted slightly against my cheek, water seeping in along the edges, but I barely noticed. Focus. Forward. Don't slip.

Ben's words from the kitchen nudged at my mind. "I need to be able to pay the bills once we get back to the house." I hadn't had time to process it fully this morning, but now, racing across rain-drenched rooftops, it hit differently. He wasn't whining or begging. He was choosing to move forward, to stand on his own, to trust himself—and to trust me to do the same.

And then there was the Daily Bugle. Ben and Jameson? Friends in this universe? My mind flicked to the image of my uncle shaking his fist at the editor in the classic stories, and I laughed quietly under the mask, rain dripping from its edges. Weird. Strange. But maybe it made sense here. Ben had connections, experience, a life beyond me. That thought twisted inside me. It's always surreal to me to know that Ben has a genuine life outside of being the father figure that Peter lost in most continuities.

The Queensborough Bridge came into view, shrouded in gray mist and streaked with rain. I sprinted across a rooftop that fed onto the bridge's support structure, leaping onto a narrow steel beam. Cold metal bit through my gloves, water streaming off the edges, but I pressed forward. Vertigo hit for half a second as I glanced down at the churning river and the tiny, glimmering traffic, but I shook it off.

Halfway across, wind whipped sideways, forcing the mask closer against my skin, rain splattering against the fabric and stinging my eyes. I had to squint through the soaked lenses of the sunglasses. What was I thinking? Sunglasses are so damn impractical as part of a superhero costume. I need to make legitimate visors. Hopefully water repellent at that.

The last span of the bridge loomed. Steel cables glistened wet and black, rain running in thin streams. I grabbed a pipe, swung across a small gap, and landed with a skidding roll on the opposite side. My chest heaved, lungs burning, but the mask stayed secure, pressed against my cheeks and forehead, water dripping down inside it, muffling the sound of the city. The wet fabric clung, but I barely noticed—it was just part of the rhythm now.

I didn't stop. Rooftops stretched ahead, slick and slippery, calling me onward. I dropped into a narrow alley a few blocks later, rain splashing around my boots. Carefully, I peeled the mask from my face just enough to wipe water from the interior and tuck it back into my bag. My hair was plastered to my forehead, but I felt… ready. Focused. Alive.

Midtown drew closer. I raced the remaining blocks, slipping between alleys, vaulting low walls, balancing on ledges. The first bell rang somewhere ahead, sharp and metallic in the rain-soaked morning. I ducked around a corner, sliding through the doors just as the echo faded.

I exhaled softly, letting the adrenaline ebb, and smiled to myself. Cut it close, yes—but thank god for reflexes and training, and thank god for the mask keeping me in the game. Rain continued to patter against the windows, silver streaks across glass, and I stepped into the school with the quiet satisfaction of having made it, hidden, unseen, just a kid under a mask in the chaos of the city.

By the time I got to my locker, I found MJ standing there, leaning slightly against the metal frame, arms crossed over her chest. I had to stifle a small laugh. I didn't think she knew where my locker was. We never hung out at school long enough for her to find that out—or maybe I didn't notice her around as much as I thought I would. Either way, there she was, and it felt… weird.

"Hey," I greeted, running a hand through my soaked hair.

"Hey…" she huffed, sounding unsure of herself. The usual spark in her eyes was dimmed by something heavier, something cautious. "How are you?"

"Been better," I admitted, letting the words hang. There was a pause, just long enough that I felt the awkwardness prickling at my skin. I stuffed my bag into the locker and shut it slowly. "Sorry I haven't stayed in contact recently."

"Don't worry about it," she said quickly, brushing a wet strand of hair from her face. "I told you, I get it. Besides…" Her tone softened, and I noticed her glancing down at the combination lock, twisting it nervously. "…even if I didn't, Harry told me what you said in the classroom the other day."

I blinked, surprised. "Since when do you talk to Harry?"

"Since you got out of the hospital, actually," she admitted, her voice low, almost reluctant. She gave a faint shrug, like it was the smallest concession she could make. "He's… a pretty nice guy."

I snorted, more amused than I probably should have been.

"Just don't get any ideas. He's with Gwen, y'know."

MJ's smirk tugged at the corner of her mouth, knowingly.

"Please… Harry's not my type anyway."

I shrugged, opening the locker fully now.

"Yeah? Good to know."

We stood there, and for a moment, neither of us said anything. The hum of lockers, the faint scraping of shoes against linoleum, the occasional muffled laughter from down the hall—it all felt like a strange backdrop to our tiny bubble of quiet. The tension was thick but muted, like we were both testing the waters without quite knowing if we wanted to dive in.

"I… uh," MJ started, hesitating, her fingers twisting around the strap of her bag. "I wasn't sure if I should—well, I wasn't sure if you'd even want to talk to me."

I looked at her incredulously. There was a weariness in her eyes, a kind of carefulness I wasn't used to seeing from her.

"Why would you think that?" I asked. "MJ, you know why I put some distance between everyone… between us."

"I know that, but when I saw you yesterday, I don't know… guess I got worried that you were avoiding me."

"I wasn't." I shake my head. "I… I should've reached out. It's not like I was avoiding you, just… I've been so caught up in my head that it slipped my mind that I was-" I pause. God, I sound pathetic. "Look, I think that situation I told you about, it should be getting fixed soon."

"Really?" she straightens up some. "What makes you say that?"

"I know who he is… but there's some things I still need to figure out before I go doing something stupid."

She exhaled, nodding lightly. I think she knows that I'm trying to avoid saying much more than that. It's not that I don't want her to know more, it's just that I'm trying to keep her out of harm's way. Despite that being a cliche, I'd rather take every chance I can to avoid bringing her into the crosshairs.

"Figure out an outfit yet?" she asks after a moment.

"Depends. You talking about for Homecoming or the other thing?"

"Both."

"I got something, but for the Homecoming, I'm uh… not too sure on that. I might not even go."

"Well, if you decide you'd like to go… you know, we could-"

"Wait… are you asking me to Homecoming?" I said, eyebrows raised, trying to sound casual but failing spectacularly.

She shrugged, a small, uncertain smile tugging at her lips.

"I am… but I don't want to pressure you into anything."

"Pressure me? Please," I said, shaking my head, a grin breaking through despite the lingering awkwardness. "If you weren't going to ask, I probably would have in the next day or two."

MJ blinked, feigning mild surprise.

"Really? How were you going to do that if you weren't talking to me?"

"Oh, I would've figured something out. Hang upside down outside your window with a boombox or something." I laughed at the thought, running a hand through my damp hair again. "You know, classic dramatic entrance."

She laughed too, a little lighter this time, though it came out more like a breathy exhale than full-on amusement.

"Yeah… I could see that. Totally not creepy."

"It's only creepy if I'm not good looking, and I am dashing."

"Keep telling yourself that, Tiger."

"Besides, I totally would have been blaring Africa outside your window. Instant win right there."

She giggled, shaking her head.

"So," I said, trying to sound casual again. "Homecoming, huh?"

"Yeah," she said, shrugging but smiling now, more sure of herself. "If you want to… we can go together."

I grinned, shaking my head.

"Definitely."

She laughed softly, the tension finally breaking.

"Good. That's settled then."

"For now," I said, the words lighter than I felt. Around us, movement surged—lockers slamming, footsteps quickening, voices overlapping as everyone shifted toward their next class.

"I'll see you in P.E.," I said, slinging my bag over my shoulder.

Her smile lingered, warm but a little shy.

"You better."

I stepped back into the current of the hall, letting it pull me toward the science wing. The rain tapped steadily against the high windows, soft and constant, a familiar rhythm now. My chest felt… lighter. Stupidly so.

Larson's classroom came into view at the end of the hall. The door was already propped open, his voice drifting out in a bored monotone as he started writing on the board.

And then my phone buzzed.

The vibration was small, almost nothing—but my body reacted before my mind did. I slowed to a stop. The hallway kept moving around me while I fished the phone from my pocket.

There was a message from Norman.

Alarm just went off at the penthouse. Someone's breaking in.

For a second, I just stared at the screen. I couldn't help but remember our conversation at the hospital. The last time somebody broke into the penthouse, it was the Vulture looking for the spider that bit me. The entire reason May was dead.

My breath thinned.

If it was him again…

If he was back…

My eyes lifted slowly to Larson's doorway. Warm fluorescent light spilled into the hall. Students slipped past me into their seats, backpacks sagging, conversations half-finished.

For one heartbeat, I hovered there.

MJ's smile flickered in my mind. Ben sitting at the kitchen table this morning. Everyone I've been trying to protect from getting hurt again. All of it flooded my brain at once. I couldn't just stand by and pretend like everything was going to be okay.

The last time I did that, I paid the price for it.

Pete. You thinking what I'm thinking?

"Do it."

I turned away from the classroom.

The decision settled in my chest with a strange, terrible calm as I walked back down the hall, then faster, then breaking into a run as soon as I was out of sight.

Cold rain slapped my face the instant I pushed outside. The city exhaled around me—wet pavement, hissing tires, the low growl of engines filtered through the downpour. I cut into the narrow alley beside the building, brick walls closing in, steam curling from a vent near the ground.

My hands moved on instinct.

Bag down. Soaked shirt off in one quick pull, the fabric heavy with rain. Cold air kissed my skin through the black compression top beneath. I shrugged into the red jacket, half-zipped it, then reached into the bag again.

The mask rested there, dark and familiar.

For just a moment, I hesitated.

Then I pulled it on.

The world narrowed. My breath echoed back at me, warm against the inside of the fabric. Rain slid along the seams, cool droplets sneaking in at the edges. I took one step back, then ran straight at the wall and jumped.

Brick rushed under my hands. One foot found purchase, then the other, and I vaulted up and over in a blur of wet motion, landing hard on the opposite rooftop. Pain flared briefly in my shoulder, sharp and bright—but it faded under the surge of motion.

Rooftops stretched ahead, slick with rain, reflecting the gray sky in broken shards. Wind pulled at my jacket as I ran. Every step sent water splashing outward in silver bursts. The city felt wide and close at the same time, breathing around me.

Normal jumping wouldn't cut it. The penthouse was too far.

I was hoping to wait to use these, but I need to get there fast.

I slapped the web shooters on my wrists. The edge of the roof rushed toward me. I gritted my teeth. No time to think. Fuck it, trial by fire it is.

I lifted my arm and fired.

THWIP.

The line vanished into the rain-washed skyline as I leapt after it.



AN: Next chapter will be Peter and Felicia's first meeting! I'm very excited for everyone to finally read it. I don't really have a lot to say in regards to the chapter, other than the fact that despite Peter and MJ having planned on going to Homecoming together, I want to remind people this is not a pairing set in stone. This is just a step towards a potential relationship that may or may not happen. If anything, I'd honestly say to not expect much of a pairing to be decided until at least book two or beyond. I do have quite a bit of story to tell, and I don't want Peter to be locked into a relationship too soon, given his circumstances.

If you're interested in seeing more early, I do have a Patreon where you can get up to five chapters early access. You can also see commissioned artwork and any original projects I'm doing before they're released to the public.

Want to talk about the story? I have a discord server where you can talk with me and others. Link will be below!

Let me know what you thought of the chapter, and I shall see you all very soon!



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

discord. gg /dQkeJPkxdD
https://www.patreon.com/c/Arsenal597
 
Chapter 32: When Along Came a Black Cat New
The web line goes taut, making my heart stop with it. Every bit of sense in my body is screaming at me that this is a horrible idea. I should have tested it—made sure it could hold my weight. Normally, I'd be careful, methodical. But careful is a luxury I don't have right now.

The Spider-Sense doesn't warn me. No danger yet. That alone is a thrill—a silent green light telling me, go. I grit my teeth, bracing for the recoil. The wind and rain hit my mask like tiny needles as I fall for a fraction of a second, free and exposed. The web snaps me upward, jerking me against gravity, and somehow—miraculously—it doesn't tear my arms out of their sockets like I half-feared. If I weren't me, if I were normal, I'd be a mangled mess by now.

Instead, I'm soaring.

And it's perfect.

It's everything I've dreamed of and more. The bridge, the rooftops, the slick rain glinting like liquid silver—all of it blurs past as I swing, one line after another. My body moves instinctively, each push-off, vault, and swing feeding into the next. I loop under a streetlamp, laugh sliding from my lips into the storm. The city's a pulse under me, wet and humming and alive.

I feel the wind tearing at my jacket, the rain soaking my hair and mask, and it all feels electric. I'm not just running across rooftops anymore. I'm flying. No traffic lights, no slippery ledges to vault over, no careful parkour pauses—just the rhythm of the city and me, in sync. The line of steel and concrete and water stretches beneath me, and I can do whatever I want. I can fly.

Queens rises below me, familiar streets and blocks turning into streaked impressions of neon and wet asphalt. I swing over avenues, dipping low enough to see the rain collecting in puddles, hearing the splash of tires through sheets of water, then looping back up into the open sky. Every swing makes my stomach lurch in that delicious, dizzying way—the kind of fear that isn't dangerous but tells you you're alive. I'm laughing now, a full, unrestrained sound, letting it chase the storm.

My fingers tighten on the line, muscles coiling, then pushing off the edge of a rooftop with all the force I can muster. Another line shoots from the web shooter, snags a fire escape across the street, and I swing into it, head over heels, rain soaking my mask so I squint, but I don't care. I'm untouchable, momentarily, weightless. The world beneath me is chaos, but here I'm the center of it.

I pass over the river, the Queensboro stretching below in steel and gray mist, the water churning like ink in a glass. Streetlights glimmer through the haze, streaked and fractured in the rain. I tilt backward, catch a new line higher up, and soar across one of the central cables. The motion is perfect, fluid, intoxicating. I've dreamed of this since I was a kid. Never like this. Not even my rooftop parkours at night could compare to the wind in my ears, the city opening beneath me, my limbs moving in perfect synch with the lines I send out into space.

And yet… I can't let the thrill distract me. Not fully. My pulse still thunders in my ears, my lungs drink the cold, wet air, and every instinct in my body is screaming: the penthouse. Whoever's breaking in could slip away while I'm giddy, laughing through the clouds. I bite back the exhilaration for a second, tightening my grip, scanning the tops of buildings, the shadows beneath bridges, the sprawl of streets lined with rushing cars and umbrellas.

A glance behind me shows the wind whipping the rain into jagged sheets. The city feels enormous, stretching for miles in every direction. And I'm moving through it, slicing across streets and avenues, a single thread of red and black in a gray, drenched world. Each line carries me farther, higher, across the river. I've left the familiar territory of Queens' rooftops behind. The skyscrapers of Manhattan creep closer now, looming wet and sharp in the mist.

Every swing makes my heart hammer. My fingers tingle where the line grips, but I'm strong, moving without thought, reacting to angles, gravity, wet surfaces, the rain slipping through gloves. There's no fear in the act itself—there's just the city, the rhythm, the cold splash of water on skin and mask, the thrill of seeing the world from above and knowing I can navigate it.

And still, underneath it all, the alarm in Norman's penthouse pulses in my mind. Someone's breaking in. The Vulture. Maybe worse. My legs pump, arms push, webs shoot. Every movement carries me forward, faster, closer to the river, closer to the other side. My chest burns, but I don't stop. The water, the rain, the wind—they're fuel, not obstacles.

I don't allow myself to dwell on what happens next. Not yet. Not until I'm across. The rhythm of my swings, the sound of the city below, the taste of rain on my lips—it all keeps me sharp, focused. And right now, that focus is survival and speed.

The final cables of the Queensboro loom ahead, slick with rain, steel slicker than ice. I adjust my wrist, angle the web just right, and launch into the gap. The web catches instantly, jerking me upward, my body arcing over the river in a perfect parabola. The city stretches below, illuminated by blurred lights, moving cars, scattered umbrellas. I feel, for the first time, a kind of joy so absolute it's frightening. I'm officially Spider-Man!

Landing on the first rooftop across from the bridge, I barely pause. Rain streams off my mask and jacket, soaking through my gloves and slicking my boots against the wet brick, but it doesn't slow me. It fuels me. Every step, every leap, every twist in the air feels alive in a way nothing else ever has. My fingers curl around the web triggers again, and I launch myself into the open space between buildings.

The web catches a fire escape, pulls me upward, and I arc over an alley slick with rain. I can feel the city pulsing below me: tires sloshing through puddles, the dull roar of traffic, distant horns echoing under wet steel bridges. I swing low, skim the edge of a rooftop, then snap another line, pulling myself upward into a perfect loop, laughing even though the cold is cutting through me. I could do this forever.

I hook the next line higher, fire it, and my body flips midair. The wet fabric of my mask presses tight against my cheeks; water seeps in around the edges. I squint through the rain, but I don't care. I'm flying, twisting, soaring, and the city bends beneath me in a dizzying, glorious blur. Queens sprawls beneath me, streets a river of lights streaked with silver rain, alleys dark and gleaming like wet black glass.

Every swing, every launch, every arc of momentum makes me feel unstoppable. I whip my head to the side, catch the next anchor point, and fling myself over a taller building. The steel fire escape shudders as my weight jerks against it, rain hissing where my boots hit metal. My arms burn deliciously. My legs pump against gravity. My chest heaves. My heart sings.

And yet, even with all this joy, my mind never stops. Norman. The penthouse. The alarm. Whoever's inside can't slip away—not today. The thought threads through my exhilaration, grounding it with urgency. The thrill is there, but now it's mixed with the precise, lethal awareness of why I'm swinging this fast, why every line, every push, every loop matters.

I shoot another web, catch a steel girder of a mid-rise, and swing wide, letting gravity pull me down into the open alley below. Skimming just above the puddles, I feel the spray hit my boots and calves. I pivot midair, hook a pipe on the adjacent building, and the line yanks me forward, up, over, perfectly timed. My stomach flips. My chest burns. My fingers tingle from the taut tension, but it's ecstasy, not pain.

Queens stretches out ahead, rooftops dark and slick, glinting with rain, fire escapes jutting like metal bones. I swing low enough to see the tiny figures rushing under umbrellas, oblivious, safe, while I carve a path through the clouds above. Each line I send out, each hook I catch, makes the city a playground I've only dreamed of. Not rooftops anymore, not just alleys. Sky. Movement. Speed. Freedom.

I can feel the bridge behind me shrinking, the river churning beneath, the steel cables slick with rain. I fire another line, launching over an empty gap between buildings, twisting my body midair. The line catches, jerking me upward, and I roar into the storm, laughing even as my lungs burn with cold air and effort. Every swing, every shot of the web, every pull on the line is perfect. The city moves with me. The rain hammers against the mask, plastering my hair, blinding my vision for half a second—and I love it.

The skyscrapers of Manhattan begin to creep closer on the horizon, the penthouse looming somewhere up there, hidden in gray mist and rain. I push myself harder, arms pumping, legs kicking, twisting midair, letting the momentum carry me like I've been born for this. Steel beams, fire escapes, water-streaked ledges—each one an opportunity, a note in the rhythm of the swing. I am exactly where I'm supposed to be, in motion, alive, electric.

Halfway across the final stretch to the Osborn district, the wind howls, pulling at my jacket and mask, soaking through my shirt and gloves. Rain pours like needles, cutting across my vision. My fingers tighten on the web triggers, calculating the next anchor, the next arc. I feel alive in a way that hits deeper than anything I've felt before. Even the city's chaos beneath me, honking, splashing, moving, feels like a partner, a rhythm to keep pace with.

Another hook, another line, another perfect swing. My legs coil, pushing off the roof, swinging me in a wide arc around a corner building. My chest heaves, lungs drinking cold air, and for a moment I let myself laugh—the kind of pure, giddy, unrestrained laugh that makes my stomach hurt. I'm flying. Not running. Not vaulting. Flying.

And then I see it. The rooftop across from the penthouse. Steel and glass, slick with rain, lights cutting through the gray storm. My pulse hammers. The alarm in my head pounds in sync with my heart. Whoever's in there—Vulture, someone else—they can't get away. Not if I can help it.

I launch myself into a final swing, soaring over the last gap. Rain pelts my mask. Wind tears at my jacket. Fingers grip the web triggers with instinctive precision. I arc into the rooftop, boots landing wet and skidding slightly on the slick steel. I catch myself, chest heaving, hair plastered to my forehead, mask soaked through.

For a second, I just stand there. The city stretches around me, chaotic, beautiful, and alive. And I grin.

The penthouse is right there.

I adjust myself, figuring out a course of action. It'd be easy enough to web zip across at this point, but I need to know whether I should be expecting a giant bloodthirsty man-bird when I go in. I'm not letting myself get caught off guard this time. He's not going to get away from me if it's actually him.

No, no, no… not this time Adrian.

The thought sours my stomach with something vile. Something so dark it physically causes me discomfort. It's not anger, whatever it is. I've never felt anything like it. It's like an aura spreading across my abdomen, traveling through every cell in my body like a virus.

My arms start shaking as I shoot two webs towards the building. The webs reach out like hands, clinging onto the surface like a child to their parents. Once it connects and I feel the tension vibrate its way to me, I know it's time. I leap, pulling myself across the street. Another zip, and I go flipping straight onto the rooftop, landing on one of the awnings.

It's messy — I nearly lose my balance as I desperately cling onto the support arm. As cool as I just felt on the way here, now I feel green. I feel like the rookie I am. I'm so disappointed in myself.

I take a deep breath, trying to calm the churn in my stomach, and drop from the awning. The rain hammers my back, slicking my jacket and plastering my hair to my forehead. Gravity pulls, but I move with it, folding my limbs instinctively, landing lightly on the wet hardwood of the penthouse terrace. My boots hiss against the soaked surface.

The Spider-Sense flickers faintly—just a hint—but it's enough. I pause, crouched low, ears straining. The subtle pulse guides me, telling me the layout beyond the windows, the gaps in the security. There's only one presence inside, a single human heartbeat in the maze of corridors. That's… unusual. My tension eases a fraction.

It's not Vulture, but it's still somebody that shouldn't be there.

I squint through the rain-streaked glass and laugh quietly, the sound muffled by the mask. A girl? Really? All this—sprinting across rooftops, web-swinging through a storm, nearly breaking my arms testing these shooters—and it's some girl thinking she can steal from Norman Osborn and get a pearl necklace out of it?

My chest loosens. My shoulders drop. Some of the adrenaline leaks out of my veins.

I shake my head, amused. "Is that it? Really? Was the thrill of getting caught by Osborn worth it for some shiny pearls?" I mutter under my breath, crouched behind a ledge. The tension that's been coiled in me since the alarm went off eases just enough that I feel almost… playful. Almost.

The rain hammers my gloves, slicking the leather, and I shift my weight, eyes scanning the terrace. I hook a web to a nearby gutter and swing lightly across the slick edge, moving like a shadow. My senses flare as I approach the window to the office wing, Spider-Sense sharpening slightly—not danger yet, just awareness.

Sliding a hand along the ceiling of the penthouse corridor, I crawl silently. Each step, each careful motion, is measured against the slippery tiles and the distant hum of rain against the glass. The soft click of my boots against polished wood echoes faintly, but nothing betrays my presence. I follow the subtle pulse of the intruder's heartbeat, weaving across ceiling beams and ledges, keeping my presence ghostlike.

There she is. Slight, careful, fumbling slightly with a glass case in Norman's private office. My mouth twitches into a grin beneath the mask. This is… almost anticlimactic. I'd crossed rivers, scaled rooftops, fought through the storm, and my "villain" turns out to be some daring but tiny amateur thief? A pearl necklace? Really?

I swing down from the ceiling, landing softly near the doorframe of Norman's office. My boots barely make a sound. I crouch low, studying her.

She doesn't notice me. I shake my head with quiet amusement. The weight of everything—the storm, the chase, the city under my hands—suddenly feels absurd.

And then, the pulse in my head spikes—sharp, insistent. Spider-Sense screaming. Not at her. Something else.

Five figures burst into the office wing in a coordinated rush. Security guards, armed and moving like a practiced unit, flooding the corridor. My stomach drops. My grin fades, replaced with tense calculation.

"Oh boy," I mutter. "Norman's sent in the attack dogs."

I freeze, scanning them through the door. Spider-Sense tells me their intent before their weapons even register fully. They're moving to neutralize, not to negotiate. My instincts flare.

I leap, slingshotting myself along a webline, and land on the ceiling again. My fingers curl around the smooth beam as I watch them sweep the room below. The intruder is oblivious, still fumbling with the case. I have to make sure nobody gets hurt. If I wait for her to be caught in the crossfire, she'll be toast. And I can't let that happen.

Rain drips down the windows, streaking across my mask. The penthouse gleams in the dim, storm-soaked light, reflections bouncing off polished floors and metal railings. The guards move with purpose, but my Spider-Sense lets me map the room like a chessboard.

I pivot, preparing my next line. The web shoots cleanly, snagging a chandelier, and I vault, swinging across the room with minimal contact. The intruder barely looks up, too focused on the case. I know I could take her down in an instant if necessary, but I don't. I can't. She's reckless, not evil. That distinction matters.

The guards fan out, scanning, weapons raised. My heart hammers. Spider-Sense pulses with sharp stabs—danger, too close, but not overwhelming. I need to move fast. I need to protect everyone without letting the intruder know I'm here yet.

I crouch on the edge of a balcony above the office.

I cling to the ceiling beam, muscles coiled tight, rain-muted city noise bleeding through the glass behind me. Below, the guards move with practiced efficiency, sweeping angles, checking corners. Their boots thud softly against polished wood. Weapons low but ready. They don't know I'm here—but if they spot her first, this turns ugly fast.

My Spider-Sense hums, not screaming, just… busy. Threads of possibility tugging at the back of my skull. Too many ways this can go wrong.

I inch forward, palms flat, boots sticking effortlessly as I crawl across the ceiling. Every movement is deliberate now. No more joyrides. No more laughing into the storm. This is the part that matters.

I pick my targets automatically. Two guards closest together near the corridor junction. One by the window. One watching the office door. If I have to move, I can web their guns first—disable, disarm, then cocoon them to the walls before they can shout. Quick. Clean. No broken bones.

I don't want to hurt anyone tonight.

The intruder is still at the case, shoulders tense, movements small and precise. She hasn't noticed the guards yet. Good. If I time this right, I can—

The office door opens.

My heart stops.

She steps out like she owns the place.

For half a second, my brain just… blanks.

How did I not notice how she looked?

Must've been the rain. Or the adrenaline. Or the fact that my mind was busy expecting talons and wings and a screaming man-bird.

Holy shit.

She's not much older than me—maybe a year or two at most. Tall, lean, moving with the kind of effortless confidence you don't fake. She's dressed in black, but not the tactical, bulky kind—this is sleek. Paneled. Form-fitting like it was poured onto her. White stitching traces the seams between panels, clean and deliberate. A cropped jacket hugs her shoulders, trimmed with white fur at the collar and cuffs, fluttering slightly as she moves.

Her hair is white. Not gray. Not blonde. White—platinum, catching the ambient light and throwing it back like frost.

In one clawed glove, she's holding a USB drive. In the other—

Oh. Oh no.

The statue.

Norman's stupid little statue. The one he bragged about over dinner. Twelve grand when he bought it. Twenty now, at least.

My brain supplies that information unhelpfully, like it's proud of itself.

Whatever tension I had coiled in my gut drains away instantly, replaced by something sharp and electric. My skin prickles. My pulse stutters.

Felicia Hardy.

Oh shit.

The Black Cat is in action. Hell yes.

And she's standing ten feet below me, illuminated by soft office lighting, rain-streaked glass framing her like a damn painting.

This is—this is the one.

Of all the characters. Of all the possible people I could've crossed paths with in this universe. Heroes, villains, monsters, madmen—

Her.

My Spider-Sense buzzes again, this time tangled with something that has absolutely nothing to do with danger.

Focus. Focus.

Felicia tilts her head slightly, ears—no, wait, those are part of the suit—angling as if she's listening. Her gaze flicks toward the guards flooding the corridor. She doesn't look surprised. Just… annoyed.

The guards tense.

"Ma'am," one of them says, weapon lifting a fraction. "Step away from the items. Now."

Felicia sighs.

Actually sighs.

Like this is inconvenient. Like she's late for something else.

"Oh, relax," she says lightly, voice smooth, amused. "I was just leaving."

My Spider-Sense spikes.

Move. Now.

I fire a web—

—but she's already gone.

Felicia pivots, sudden and fluid, tossing the statue up into the air. One of the guards shouts instinctively, eyes tracking it. Rookie mistake. She kicks off the floor, vaulting sideways, sliding under a desk as gunfire erupts—not aimed at her, but at the empty space she was standing in half a second ago.

The statue crashes harmlessly onto a couch.

Felicia's already moving.

She flips up, plants a foot against the wall, and launches herself toward the shattered window at the far end of the office. Glass explodes outward, rain and wind rushing in like the city itself is trying to reclaim her.

"Stop her!" someone yells.

Too late.

I don't even think.

I drop.

My hands peel off the ceiling and I fall straight down, landing between two guards in a crouch. Before either of them can react, I web their guns to the floor and yank hard. Metal clatters. Shouts erupt behind me.

"Hey!" I call, instinctively keeping my voice light even as adrenaline slams through me. "Nobody needs to get hurt, okay?"

They barely hear me.

Felicia's already outside.

I sprint, boots splashing through rainwater pooling on the marble floor, and dive through the broken window just in time to see her leap from the penthouse terrace, coat flaring, white hair flashing against the night.

For one insane heartbeat, she looks like she's about to fall.

Then a grappling line snaps taut from her wrist, catching on a neighboring building, and she swings away into the storm.

My chest tightens.

Of course she has one.

I don't hesitate.

I fire a web, vault over the terrace railing, and leap after her.

The city opens beneath me again—wind, rain, lights streaking past as gravity grabs hold. My stomach flips, exhilaration surging right back up alongside something warmer, sharper.

I chase her through the rain, heart pounding, lungs burning, a grin tugging at my mouth despite myself.

I was not letting Felicia Hardy disappear into the night without saying hello.

I land hard on the rooftop, boots skidding a few inches across wet gravel before my grip catches. Rain slicks everything, neon bleeding up from the streets below. For a half-second, I'm just listening—sirens far away, traffic hissing through puddles, my own heartbeat loud in my ears.

No immediate danger.

She thinks she's clear.

Felicia stands near the edge, back half-turned to me, rolling her shoulders like she's shaking off the night. The city stretches behind her, Manhattan stacked high and jagged, lights glowing through the rain like a circuit board. Her grappling line retracts with a quiet whirr into her wrist. Casual. Unbothered.

I straighten and clear my throat.

"Quite the exit you made back there," I say, pitching my voice easy, almost conversational. "I'd have given you a ten, but you were spotted, so I had to deduct a couple points."

I smile softly under the mask, even though she can't see it.

She freezes.

Not startled. Not panicked. Just… still.

Then she turns.

Up close, it's worse. Better. I don't know. Her eyes are sharp, bright green even in the low light, reflective like she's always calculating distances, angles, escape routes. Rain beads on the white fur of her collar, clinging to it like frost. Her suit is scuffed in places—she's been doing this a while—but there's nothing sloppy about her stance.

"Where did you come from?" she asks.

Her voice is light, but there's an edge there now. Alert. Curious.

I shrug, hands raised slightly, palms open. Friendly neighborhood posture. "Lady, I don't have the time to explain all that… but just know I've been following you since you grabbed that USB."

Her gaze flicks down—just for a second—to my chest.

The spider.

She arches a brow.

"Spider, huh?" she says, lips curling faintly. "Don't you know cats like to play with spiders?"

Internally, my soul leaves my body.

I'm screaming. Fully. Somewhere deep inside, a thirteen-year-old version of me is running laps, knocking over furniture, absolutely losing his mind. She said the line. She actually said the line.

Outwardly, I manage not to combust.

"Yeah," I say, tilting my head. "I've heard. Usually doesn't end great for the—"

My Spider-Sense detonates.

I barely have time to react.

Felicia lunges.

Not reckless. Not wild. Surgical.

Her claws flash white, slicing through the rain, and I twist on instinct—but I'm late. Too late. Something rakes across the side of my face, pain flaring hot and sharp just beneath the mask. The fabric tears slightly. I hiss, stumbling back a step.

She's already past me.

"Sorry!" she calls over her shoulder, almost laughing. "Reflex!"

Blood trickles warm against my cheek, mixing with rain. Not deep. Not serious. But it stings like hell—and worse, it's embarrassing. I was so focused on the banter, on the moment, that I forgot the most important rule:

Never assume the person across from you isn't dangerous just because they're smiling.

Felicia dives off the rooftop.

"Nope!" I shout, recovering fast, adrenaline roaring back. "Oh, game on!"

I sprint, leap, and fire a webline into the darkness. It catches, and I swing after her, city yawning wide beneath us. Wind tears at my jacket, rain blurring everything into streaks of color and motion.

She's fast.

Not just athletic—smart. She weaves low through alley gaps, then shoots upward suddenly, forcing me to adjust mid-swing. Her grappling line snaps out at odd angles, pulling her into tight arcs that make my stomach lurch just watching.

I adapt.

Web to lamppost. Release. Reattach to a fire escape. I swing wide, cutting her off instead of following directly. The city becomes a puzzle—angles, heights, timing—and I solve it on the fly, laughing breathlessly as I go.

This is insane.

She lands on the side of a building, boots magnetizing or gripping somehow, and runs horizontally across brick before flipping off into open air again. I mirror her a second later, wall-crawling effortlessly, rain slicking past my fingers.

"Y'know," I call out, "most people say hi before trying to take my face off!"

"Occupational hazard!" she shoots back.

She cuts left, diving through a narrow gap between two buildings barely wide enough for her shoulders. I hesitate for a split second—then trust myself and follow, shoulders brushing brick, rainwater cascading down the walls like waterfalls.

We burst out onto a wider avenue, traffic honking below as we arc overhead. She lands on a moving truck, rides it for three seconds, then vaults off again, grappling line singing.

Show-off.

My Spider-Sense hums constantly now, a low electric buzz keeping me just ahead of disaster. A crane arm swings unexpectedly—duck. A loose sign tears free in the wind—kick off the wall and clear it. My body moves before I think, joy and focus blending into something clean and sharp.

She glances back mid-swing, eyes widening just a little when she sees I'm still there.

"Oh," she says. "You're good."

I grin despite the blood and rain. "I try."

She accelerates.

So do I.

We climb higher now, rooftops giving way to glass and steel. Rain slicks the skyscraper faces, reflections warping and stretching as we pass. The city feels infinite beneath us, alive and roaring, and for a moment—just a moment—I forget about Norman, about alarms and USB drives and consequences.

It's just the chase.

The dance.

Felicia lands on a narrow ledge near the top of a building, skidding slightly before catching herself. She straightens, breathing hard now, chest rising and falling. She looks around, scanning, calculating—and then I drop in behind her, landing softly.

She spins, claws out—

—but stops.

Because I'm already there.

Perched easily, rain dripping off my sleeves, trying very hard not to look as thrilled as I feel.

Her eyes flick from my face to the torn edge of my mask, to the blood, then back up again.

"Well," she says, smiling despite herself. "Looks like the spider's got some bite."

I open my mouth to reply—

And my Spider-Sense flares again, sharp and insistent, from somewhere below.

Before either of us can react, the sound of rotors cuts through the rain.

Felicia's smile fades.

"Uh-oh," she murmurs.

And just like that, she's gone again—leaping off the ledge, vanishing into the wet, glowing maze of the city.

She doesn't slow.

If anything, she gets meaner about it.

Felicia snaps another line out, swinging low and fast between buildings, rain tearing sideways as the wind funnels through the streets. I follow a heartbeat later, barely missing a chimney as she tosses something back over her shoulder.

The smoke bomb pops midair.

White-gray clouds bloom instantly, thick and chemical, swallowing the space between us. My Spider-Sense flares—not danger exactly, just disorientation—so I twist sideways, cut my line, and free-fall through it. The smoke slides past me like a curtain as I shoot a fresh web downward, catching a streetlight and slingshotting myself back into clean air.

"Don't you know how to take a hint?!" she shouts, breath audible now as she swings around a fire escape, boots clanging against metal.

I laugh despite myself, adrenaline buzzing in my veins.

"Would you believe me I'm incredibly dense when it comes to females?"

Another smoke bomb sails past my head. I duck, feel it detonate behind me, and flip upside down mid-swing, letting momentum carry me forward.

"What'd you break into the penthouse for? I mean, it's not a jewelry store."

She glances back, lips curling.

"Oh? You think that's more of what I'm into?"

"It's gotta be better than breaking into a single father's place!"

She lands on a ledge, crouched and coiled like—yeah, okay, exactly like a cat—then launches again. "What does it matter to you?"

"I'm trying to make conversation!" I shoot a web past her, miss on purpose just to keep her moving. "That so bad?"

"Didn't your parents tell you not to talk to strangers?" she calls, tossing another smoke bomb.

"Yeah, but for you I'll make an exception!"

"I bet you say that to all the girls."

She jukes suddenly, spinning midair, and my webline snaps uselessly past her shoulder. I bounce off the side of a building, boots slapping glass, then kick off again, climbing higher. The Chrysler Building looms ahead of us now, its silver crown cutting through the rain like a blade, lights glowing through mist.

"Only to the ones that get my attention," I reply, breathless, honest before I can stop myself.

She doesn't answer that.

Instead, she accelerates straight up the Chrysler, boots magnetizing or gripping or doing something frankly unfair. I follow on instinct, palms and feet sticking to slick stone as rain pours down the façade. Gargoyles and art deco ridges blur past as we climb, the city shrinking beneath us, traffic reduced to lines of light.

Another smoke bomb detonates right in my face.

I cough, twist, and let myself fall backward, trusting my Sense. A web fires, catches a spire, and I whip around the smoke, coming up beside her just as she vaults for the upper ledge.

This time, I don't miss.

My hand snaps out and grabs her wrist.

The impact jars us both, momentum slamming her back against the wall. I plant my feet, webs shooting instinctively to brace us, pinning her in place against the wet stone. Rain streaks down her suit, breath fogging faintly in the cold air.

For a second, we're just there. Suspended. Close enough that I can see the flecks of gold in her eyes.

"Well," she says, voice light despite the situation, "you've got me. Now what do you plan on doing?"

I swallow. The city hums far below us, wind whipping my jacket. "I… just want to talk."

"Aw, that all?" She pouts mockingly, tilting her head. "Sorry. I don't like talking, Spider."

She kicks me square in the chest.

I grunt, surprised more than hurt, losing my grip as I'm knocked backward. I catch myself a second later on the building, claws digging in—but that's all she needs. She twists, yanks free, and launches herself into open air again.

I push off after her—

And my Spider-Sense screams.

Not from her.

From above.

From everywhere.

It's different than before. Sharper. Heavier. Like the air itself is about to tear open.

I don't think. I react.

Web Rush kicks in—my perception snapping tight, the world slowing just enough as I whip around mid-leap. Rain hangs in the air like glass beads. The Chrysler's lights blur past as something descends from the sky at terrifying speed.

Wings.

Massive.

For half a heartbeat, my mind tries to make it fit something familiar.

Vulture…

But then the lightning flashes—and the feathers catch the light.

Red.

Deep, violent crimson, layered and sharp, cutting through the rain as the figure plummets past the building like a missile. Metal glints beneath the wings. A taloned shape twists midair, correcting its descent with horrifying ease.

My stomach drops out.

That's not him.

That's not Adrian.

"What the fuck?" I breathe, the words torn out of me by wind and shock.

Felicia's already gone, forgotten in an instant, her presence fading from my awareness as every instinct I have locks onto the thing screaming down from the sky. The rain seems to recoil around it, wind howling as it banks hard, claws sparking against stone before launching again into the dark.

Red feathers scatter droplets like blood when it flies by me. It only takes me a moment to come to a horrifying realization. It's going after Felicia… shit.

The red blur cuts through the storm like a thrown blade.

I don't think—I move.

Webline. Anchor. Swing.

The Red Vulture dives after Felicia with terrifying intent, wings snapping open and closed as thunder rolls overhead. He's faster than Adrian ever was. Not just stronger—hungrier. Every beat of those wings sounds like something being torn apart, the air screaming as he barrels through it.

Felicia sees him.

I know because the moment she glances back, her entire body language changes. Gone is the teasing confidence. Gone is the playful rhythm of her escape. She stumbles mid-swing, barely correcting herself, breath hitching so hard I hear it even over the storm.

Fear. Real, naked fear.

That chills me more than the rain.

"YOU'RE NOT GETTING AWAY THIS TIME!"

The voice booms through the sky, raw and animal, carried on thunder and metal and rage. It's not shouted—it's declared, like a sentence being carried out.

What the hell did she do to piss that off?

And worse—why does my Spider-Sense feel like it's constantly a half-second behind him?

I push harder.

Every swing is tighter, sharper. I stop enjoying it entirely. This isn't rhythm anymore—it's survival math. Angle, speed, timing. I rip through the rain, webbing snapping onto ledges, spires, cranes—anything that'll hold for half a second. My shoulders burn. My wrists scream. My lungs feel like they're full of ice.

Felicia jukes hard around a building corner, desperation overtaking grace. The Red Vulture follows without losing momentum, talons clanging against steel as he clips the edge and corrects instantly.

He's hunting her.

And he's about to catch her.

She slips—just a little. Enough.

The Red Vulture surges forward, claws extending, metal shrieking as they cut through rain—

I swing in sideways and tackle fate.

I grab Felicia around the waist and let gravity do the rest.

We drop.

Hard.

I twist midair, firing a webline straight down, snapping it tight at the last second. The line yanks us sideways instead of straight down, and I throw her onto the nearest rooftop as we skid across wet gravel.

She rolls once, comes up on a knee—

And I land between her and the sky.

"Hey," I say, breathless, forcing a grin that absolutely does not belong here, "I thought we had something special!"

She stares at me like I've lost my mind.

"Sorry," I add quickly. "I make jokes when I'm nervous."

"How about you joke later?" she snaps, scrambling behind me.

The impact shakes the rooftop.

The Red Vulture lands ten feet away in a spray of rain and sparks.

Up close, he's worse.

Adrian had been monstrous—but this thing is something else entirely. His wings are larger, heavier, each feather edged in metal. His talons are fully mechanical, jointed steel gleaming under red lights embedded along the wings. And unlike Adrian…

This one has hair.

Long, black hair plastered to his skull and shoulders, clinging to him like a drowning man's last grasp. Rain runs down his face, through a mouth curled into something feral.

His eyes lock on Felicia.

Then slide to me.

"You need to stay out of this, Spider," he growls. "Your time will come soon enough."

"Oh yeah?" I spread my hands, forcing casual into my posture while my Spider-Sense howls. "Something tells me you know Adrian. How's that wing doing?"

His lips peel back.

"It's healed," he says. "And he'll be coming for you."

Great. I'm looking forward to that.

"You know this guy?" Felicia whispers, gripping my jacket from behind.

"Eh," I mutter, biting the inside of my cheek, "more like I know his avian twin."

I straighten, pointing at him despite every instinct telling me this is a terrible idea. "Now, don't make me report you for not having a license to fly!"

"Unlike the other," the Red Vulture snarls, wings spreading wide, metal feathers catching lightning, "I will not fail to tear you apart."

"You sure about that?" I clench my fists, webs ready, body coiled. "Bring it on, bird-brain."

Felicia yanks my sleeve.

"You don't want to do that!"

I don't look back at her.

"No," I say quietly, something cold and heavy settling in my chest. "Actually… I really do."

The Red Vulture lunges.

The impact rings up my leg and into my spine—metal on bone, vibration rattling my teeth—but it's worth it. Red Vulture's head snaps sideways, rain exploding off his face in a violent spray as my heel connects cleanly with his jaw. He staggers midair, wings flaring wide to compensate, talons scraping sparks off the rooftop as he regains balance.

"Leave the girl alone!" I roar, following through with the kick and twisting out of range. "Felicia, you need to go!"

She freezes for half a heartbeat, eyes wide. Shock flashes across her face—not fear, not confusion. Recognition. The name lands harder than any punch. I feel it immediately, that sinking drop in my gut. I shouldn't have said it. I shouldn't know it. Rookie mistake. Big one.

But she moves.

That's all that matters.

She backs away, then turns, vanishing over the edge of the rooftop in a blur of white-lined black and fearless motion. Gone. Swallowed by rain and steel and shadow. Safe—at least for now.

Good.

I don't look after her. I don't let myself. I keep my eyes locked on Red Vulture as his head slowly rolls back into place, metal talons curling, wings flexing. The air around him feels heavier now, charged with something ugly and personal. Whatever leash he had on himself snaps clean in two.

"You should not have interfered," he snarls, voice scraping like rusted steel dragged over concrete. "She belongs to me."

"No," I say, planting my feet, web shooters warm against my wrists. "She really, really doesn't."

He launches.

There's no warning roar this time, no dramatic wind-up. He just hits me—full force—like a freight train wrapped in feathers and blades. My Spider-Sense screams half a second too late, and suddenly the skyline tilts violently as he slams into my chest, claws digging into my jacket. The world becomes motion and rain and panic as we rocket sideways, straight into a glass-fronted skyscraper.

Windows explode.

The sound is deafening. Glass erupts outward in a crystalline storm, slicing into my arms, my neck, my cheek. Pain flares sharp and hot, dozens of tiny cuts opening at once as my back slams against the building's face. He drags me along it, metal talons shrieking as they gouge through steel and concrete, sparks mixing with rain and blood.

I grit my teeth and scream—not in fear, but fury—and plant my boots against the wall, kicking hard. The impact jolts him just enough. I twist, firing a web point-blank into his wing joint. The line sticks. I yank, wrenching the wing upward at an unnatural angle.

He howls.

The pressure lets up for half a second—long enough. I tear free, tumbling backward through open air, lungs burning, skin screaming where glass still clings. I fire another web, swing wide, then snap right back at him, slamming into his back with everything I've got. My arms lock around his torso, fingers digging into metal plating as rain whips past us both.

"Not this time," I snarl into the storm.

He bucks violently, wings beating in erratic, brutal strokes, trying to shake me loose. My arms burn, shoulders screaming in protest, but I hold on, shifting my grip, crawling higher. I can feel the raw strength in him—stronger than Adrian was. Faster. Meaner. Less human. Whatever's driving him, it's not desperation. It's obsession.

He tries to dive again, angling us back toward the buildings.

I won't let him.

I plant my feet against his back and pull hard on the web still tangled in his wing, forcing it upward. His balance falters. His trajectory shifts. Instead of diving down into steel and glass, we surge upward, climbing fast, rain thinning into mist as the city drops away beneath us.

"How about we get some privacy, huh?" I growl, tightening my grip. "I'm really not in the mood for collateral damage."

His laughter cuts through the thunder, loud and unhinged. "There's nowhere for you to run now, bug!"

"Who said I was running," I shoot back, breath ragged but steady, "you oversized chicken?"

He twists violently, slamming his head back into my face. Pain detonates behind my eyes. Something warm runs down under my mask. Blood. Great. He follows it up with a backhanded slash of his talons that rakes across my ribs. The suit absorbs most of it, but not all. White-hot pain blooms along my side.

I don't let go.

Instead, I fire two webs straight up, anchoring them to the underside of a passing rooftop ledge far above. The lines go taut instantly. I yank hard, using the sudden resistance to whip us both sideways. The maneuver throws him off rhythm, wings flaring too wide.

That's the opening.

I crawl up onto his shoulders and drive my elbow down into the base of his neck. Once. Twice. He snarls and reaches back, claws grazing my arm, tearing fabric and skin. Pain flares again, but I welcome it. It means he's focused on me now.

Good.

That's the problem I noticed earlier, the thing that's been screaming at the back of my mind since this fight started—he never cared about me. Not really. Every strike, every maneuver, every dive was angled toward Felicia. Toward getting past me. Toward her.

Not anymore.

He twists again, trying to slam me into open air, but I adjust, firing webs into his other wing, binding it partially. His flight stutters. We wobble, lose altitude, then surge upward again as he overcompensates with brute force.

"You think you're protecting her?" he snarls, rain plastering his hair across his face. "You think you can change what's coming?"

"I don't need to change everything," I snap, yanking the webbing tighter. "I just need to stop you."

He slams his wings together behind him, crushing me between them. My breath whooshes out in a painful gasp. Stars explode across my vision. For a terrifying second, my grip slips.

No.

Not again.

I snarl and drive my knee forward, slamming it into his spine. He screams, pitch rising into something feral, and I use the moment to flip over his shoulder, launching myself upward with a web-assisted boost. I spin midair, fire three rapid webs, cocooning his wings further, tangling metal and feathers together.

He thrashes, furious, wounded, dangerous—but grounded now in a way he wasn't before.

Rain pours. Thunder cracks overhead. My arms shake, my body screaming from a dozen small injuries, glass cuts stinging, ribs aching, blood slick under my mask.

"Just tell me where Adrian is," I snarl through clenched teeth as rain lashes my mask, arms shaking from strain and adrenaline, "and I'll make sure you get a cozy cell in the Raft. Promise."

"Never."

The word is sharp, absolute. He bares his teeth—too many of them, too wide—and laughs.

It's wrong. Not loud. Not manic. Mocking. Like he knows something I don't. Like the punchline is already written and I'm sprinting toward it blind.

"Fine!" I roar, fury punching through the ache in my ribs, through the sting of glass and rain and blood. "This is going to hurt!"

He laughs harder.

"You're right about that!"

He explodes out of the webbing.

Metal shrieks as he tears free, wings snapping outward with brutal force. I barely have time to register the movement before pain detonates across my chest. His talons rake down me in a vicious, deliberate arc—three lines, deep enough to burn, right over the same place Adrian tore me open that night. My breath catches in a sharp, broken gasp. It feels like someone poured fire straight into my lungs.

I don't scream. I refuse to.

Instead, I hit him back.

We collide in midair, fists and claws and elbows smashing together as gravity finally remembers us. The clouds peel away around us, cold mist tearing past my ears as the city rockets up to meet us. We're falling. Fast. No elegance now. No control. Just two bodies tumbling out of the sky like a broken promise.

I slam my fist into his jaw. He answers with a knee to my ribs that makes something crack. Maybe bone. Maybe just pain pretending to be worse. I grab a handful of his wet, matted hair and yank his head down, smashing my forehead into his face. The impact rattles my skull, stars bursting across my vision, but he howls and flails, wings beating uselessly in the air.

Wind roars past us, deafening. Rain becomes needles again. The city lights stretch and smear beneath us, turning into long, nauseating streaks of color. My Spider-Sense is screaming, not warning so much as begging—move, move, move—but everything feels slow, delayed, like my thoughts are wading through syrup.

We spin.

He claws at my shoulder. I punch his throat. He laughs again, even as he chokes, spittle and rain flying from his mouth. We're too close now. Too tangled. I can feel the heat of him, the vibration of his wings, the raw, ugly strength packed into every movement.

We're seconds from becoming a headline.

I twist, firing a web blindly, not even aiming—just praying. The line catches something solid below. A fire escape. A ledge. I don't know. I don't care. I yank hard, wrenching myself sideways out of his grasp. My shoulder screams in protest, nearly tearing loose as momentum whips me away from him.

The world snaps violently.

I smash through glass.

The sound is explosive, disorienting. Windows burst inward as I plow through them like a human wrecking ball. Shards tear at my arms, my back, my legs. I tumble through an office space in a blur of overturned desks and flickering lights, then through another window, and another—

—and then I'm falling again.

This time it's not graceful. Not controlled. I slam into a dumpster back-first with a bone-jarring crash that dents the metal inward like it's aluminum foil. The impact knocks the air out of me completely. My vision goes white. Then black. Then static.

Everything tilts.

The rain sounds wrong down here—too loud, too close. My ears ring, a high, shrill whine drowning out the city. The world swims as I roll off the dumpster and hit the wet concrete hard, shoulder first. Pain blooms everywhere at once, unfocused and overwhelming, like my body can't decide where to scream from first.

I groan, pushing myself up on trembling arms. The alley spins. Brick walls loom and recede. Neon reflections smear across puddles like oil slicks. My mask feels too tight, like it's squeezing my skull. Blood drips down into my mouth—coppery, thick. I spit, miss the ground entirely.

Okay. Okay. Breathe.

I stagger to my feet, legs unsteady, one hand braced against the cold brick. My heart is pounding so hard it feels like it's trying to claw its way out of my chest. Every breath hurts. My chest burns where he cut me, the wounds throbbing in angry, pulsing time with my heartbeat.

The Spider-Sense buzzes.

Not a spike. Not a scream.

A low, vicious hum.

My head snaps up—but I'm too slow.

Something slams into my shoulders from behind, crushing me back down to the pavement. Talons bite in, metal digging into muscle, pinning me flat. The concrete cracks beneath my cheek as my face hits hard. My arms splay uselessly, palms scraping against rain-slick ground.

He's on me.

Red Vulture's weight bears down like a mountain. His breath is hot against the back of my neck, reeking of rain and blood and something feral. His claws tighten, grinding into my shoulders until my vision blurs again.

"You should have stayed out of the way," he growls, low and intimately.

I grit my teeth, fingers curling against the pavement, every muscle in my body screaming at me to move, to fight, to do something. Pain flares as I try to push up, but he slams me back down effortlessly.

I draw in a shaking breath, rain splashing against my mask, city noise creeping back into focus around the ringing in my ears. I bare my teeth beneath the mask and laugh—a raw, breathless sound.

"Yeah," I rasp, muscles coiling despite the pain. "You're gonna have to do a lot better than that."

My hands are still free.

That realization cuts through the pain like a spark to gasoline.

Before he can tighten his grip again, before he can crush the breath out of me entirely, I flick both wrists and fire a thick webline straight past my shoulder. It splats wetly against the side of the dumpster behind us, adhesive biting hard. I don't hesitate. I yank with everything I've got.

The dumpster flies.

Metal screams as it tears free from the ground, skidding and tipping before momentum takes over completely. It slams into Red Vulture's side like a freight train. The impact rips him off me in a violent snarl of steel and feathers, sending him crashing into the opposite wall. The pressure vanishes all at once, and I gasp, air tearing back into my lungs in a ragged, painful rush.

I roll hard, barely aware of where my body ends and the alley begins. My shoulder screams as I hit the ground again, but I keep moving, forcing my legs under me, pushing up through the haze. My vision swims, edges dark and pulsing, but I'm upright. Barely.

I clench my fists, chest heaving, rain streaking down my mask. My hands are shaking, but they're steady enough. I pop open the web shooters with my thumbs, fingers working by muscle memory as I swap cartridges in a single smooth motion. Fresh webbing clicks into place just as I look up.

Red Vulture is already moving.

He hurls the dumpster aside with one wing.

Not his arms. Not both wings. One.

The metal container spins end over end, slamming into the far end of the alley and collapsing in on itself with a deafening crash. My stomach drops.

Oh shit. You can use your wings like that? That's just lovely.

He straightens slowly, rain sliding down metal talons and soaked feathers, long black hair plastered to his face. His eyes lock onto me, bright and furious, murder written into every twitch of his body. He spreads his wings, scraping them against the brick walls as he steps forward.

I brace myself—

—and then something flashes past my vision.

A sharp thunk as a small knife embeds itself into the wall beside his head. It hums faintly at first, a soft electric pulse glowing blue along its edges.

Red Vulture turns toward it.

And then it screams.

The sound is high-pitched and violent, like feedback cranked to eleven, like metal tearing through bone. It rips through the alley, through my skull, through everything. I clap my hands over my ears instinctively, teeth rattling as the noise vibrates through my chest.

Red Vulture shrieks in agony.

He stumbles back, wings spasming, claws tearing gouges into the brick as he grabs his head, howling. The sound tears at my nerves, raw and animal, echoing off the walls until it feels like the alley itself is screaming with him.

"Move!" Felicia's voice snaps from above.

I don't argue.

I bolt.

I fire a web into the darkness and yank myself sideways, crashing through a door into a darkened building just as the screaming cuts off abruptly behind us. Felicia drops in a heartbeat later, already moving, already scanning, shutting the door quietly behind her.

We don't stop until we're several floors up, tucked into a narrow maintenance room that smells like dust and old wiring. Felicia crouches by the window, peering out through a cracked pane, muscles coiled and ready.

I collapse.

My legs give out completely, and I slide down the wall until I'm sitting hard on the floor, head tipped back, chest heaving. Every breath feels like dragging broken glass through my lungs. My shoulder throbs where his talons dug in. My chest burns where the cuts are reopening, warm blood soaking into my suit.

For a long moment, all I can hear is my own breathing.

Felicia keeps watch. Minutes stretch. Rain hammers the city outside. Red Vulture never reappears, thankfully. I'm not sure I want to go tango with him again. Despite the fact I can keep fighting, I'm not trying to push my luck. Eventually, she exhales and relaxes just a fraction, turning back toward me.

"You didn't have to do that for me," she says dryly. "I don't owe you or anything."

I laugh weakly, then immediately regret it as pain flares through my ribs. "I didn't do it because of that…"

She arches a brow.

"Then what is it, you got a death wish?"

I shake my head, wincing.

"Actually, I have a thing about bullies." I glance up at her, managing a crooked grin beneath the mask. "But, you know. You're welcome."

There's a beat.

"Yeah," she says. "Thanks."

Silence settles between us, thick but not uncomfortable. My breathing finally starts to slow, the spinning in my head easing just enough for me to think again.

"So," I say carefully, shifting against the wall. "Now do you think we can have that talk?"

Her eyes narrow. "Seriously, what does it matter to you… and how do you know my name?"

I hesitate for half a second, then gesture weakly to the floor beside me. "If you sit down, I can explain. But I need you to answer a few questions of my own. Deal?"

She studies me, searching for something—danger, maybe. Lies. Whatever she sees, it's enough. Good, because I really hope she can tell me where the hell that guy came from. I don't need two Vultures running around the city. One of them is bad enough.

"Deal," Felicia says, lowering herself to sit across from me as the rain keeps falling outside…






Meanwhile…






Rain still clung to Red Vulture when he reached the lair, dripping in slow, angry rivulets onto the concrete floor. The entrance sealed behind him with a low mechanical groan, cutting off the distant thunder of the city. Inside, the air was thick—sterile, chemical, faintly metallic. The kind of place that never forgot what it was built for.

Red Vulture tore his wings inward, the membranes shuddering as he paced. Claw marks gouged the floor where he turned too sharply, rage bleeding into every movement. His breathing came hard, uneven, a rasping sound dragged through his chest like broken glass.

He had failed.

Again.

The memory burned: the thief slipping through his talons, the boy swinging in from nowhere, that damned scream-knifed sound ripping through his skull. His hands curled into fists, metal shrieking against metal as he struck the wall. The impact cracked reinforced concrete. Dust fell in lazy spirals.

"Pathetic," he muttered, though he wasn't sure if the word was meant for himself or the world.

Slow footsteps echoed behind him.

Measured. Unhurried. Certain.

Red Vulture stiffened instantly, wings lowering as if pulled by invisible strings. He didn't turn. He didn't need to.

The Jackal was already there.

"Where is she?" Jackal asked calmly, voice smooth as silk dragged across a blade. He stood just beyond the reach of Red's wings, hands clasped behind his back, lab coat pristine despite the damp air. His eyes gleamed with curiosity rather than anger, which somehow felt worse.

Red Vulture's jaw tightened.

"The boy showed up and interfered," he growled.

Jackal hummed softly, circling him.

"Ah. Of course he did."

The Jackal stopped directly in front of him, tilting his head like a scientist examining a specimen that had behaved unpredictably.

"Jimmy," he said gently. "You disappoint me. Are you really telling me that he was too much for you as well?"

Red's talons dug into the floor. "The thief disoriented me long enough for them to escape," he snarled. "I won't let it happen again."

Jackal smiled.

"No," he said, lightly. The word carried weight, sinking into the room like a command etched into stone. "You're to stay put."

Red Vulture's wings twitched, instinct screaming defiance, but his body didn't move. Couldn't. The conditioning dug deep—layers of obedience reinforced with pain, memory, and something far worse than either.

Jackal continued, pacing now, his footsteps echoing through the cavernous space. "If there's one thing that boy seems exceptionally good at, it's creating attention. We don't need that. Our colleagues are already upset about having to get involved with Adrian's extraction." His eyes flicked toward a darkened chamber deeper within the lair. "We cannot afford another incident like that."

Red Vulture swallowed hard. "We need her," he said. "You said it yourself."

"And we will have her," Jackal replied smoothly. He stopped again, this time close enough that Red could smell antiseptic and cold metal. "And now that she's aligned herself with the boy, we know exactly how to find her."

Red's breathing slowed despite himself, rage shifting into something sharper. Anticipation. Hunger.

"But not yet," Jackal added, raising a finger.

Red Vulture flinched as if struck.

"Rest now," Jackal said, tone final. "When Adrian is ready, the two of you will go out together and end this… game once and for all."

The word game echoed, mocking and cruel.

Red Vulture lowered his head. The fight drained from his posture, replaced by something colder and far more dangerous—obedience forged from fear and devotion tangled so tightly they were impossible to separate.

"Yes, master," he said.

Jackal watched him for a long moment, eyes unreadable. Then he turned, already losing interest, already thinking several steps ahead. The lights dimmed slightly as he walked away, shadows swallowing his form piece by piece.



AN: Hey guys. Hope you all enjoyed. This was one of the most enjoyable chapters I've written so far in the entire story. Finally getting the two characters I've wanted to write together since the conception of this story to meet was beyond satisfying. I loved everything about this chapter. There was a lot of payoff that I honestly had planned on getting to this point specifically to hit the ground running. I wanted Peter to web swing here. I wanted Peter and Felicia to meet here. I wanted Peter to learn about Red Vulture only upon meeting Felicia. There is a lot here that I wanted to all unfold at the same time.

Over 250k for us to have Peter finally at long last web swing. That sounds crazy, but for those who have binge read this, I know this will feel just as satisfying as it was for me to write it here. In a way, I view this as the true start of the story. I said it a couple times before, but I really do mean it. Every time I have said this, it's because I'm looking at this from a different perspective each time.

Chapter 15... I said this was the start to the story because it was the moment you'd expect an origin story to start. The death that drives Peter to become Spider-Man. What makes him decide to put that mask on.

Chapter 29 I kind of viewed it as the start to the story because it was the moment Peter donned his homemade suit. The first time Spidey truly appears.

But Chapter 31 going into Chapter 32? This feels special to me. Peter finally has his web shooters. He can web swing. He can officially do whatever a spider can, now. He's met Black Cat. He is where I want him to be.

The more I write this story, the more I fall in love with it. It honestly astounds me that I've been able to write something so well-received. Yeah, there's some comments that have been questionable, but ultimately everyone has enjoyed this that I can see.

The one thing I will say, and it will always be what I say. The name Absolute is a minor inspiration from the DC Absolute comics. Is this the main goal of the story to reflect that? No. I wanted something fresh, but familiar. That has always been the goal. But the true alterations to this universe have yet to come. This is merely the beginning, and I hope you guys continue to follow it as it continues to grow.

Please let me know what you thought of the chapter.

As always, if you're interested in seeing more... I do have a P where you can get up to five chapters early access. I also post commissioned artworks for my stories there, as well as original projects that will be coming in the future.

Want to talk about the story? I have a discord server where you can do that! Link will be down below.

That being said, guys, I hope you all have a great start to 2026, and I shall see you very soon!



This story is cross-posted on Ao3, FF, and QQ.
discord. gg /dQkeJPkxdD

https://www.patreon.com/c/Arsenal597
 
Chapter 33: Crossed Paths New
"Felicia, you need to go!"

The words replayed in her head like a stuck record, skipping at the worst possible moment. Over and over. Loud enough that she almost missed the part where she made the decision—the stupid one—to turn back.

She could have been gone. She should have been gone. The USB was secure, tucked away where no one would find it unless they knew exactly where to look. Mission accomplished. Clean. Professional. The kind of job her father would have nodded at once and never mentioned again.

Instead, she'd doubled back and thrown a knife that screamed like the devil had discovered feedback.

Heroics. The one thing she'd been told never to indulge in.

Her father's voice still lived rent-free in her skull. Heroes die young. Or worse, they live long enough to realize nobody remembers them. He'd said it calmly, like he was talking about the weather, like it was a universal truth instead of a warning meant specifically for her. Don't step in. Don't save anyone. Don't bleed for strangers. You end up face-down in an alley, and the city steps over you on its way to work.

And yet…

Here she was.

Felicia studied the masked man across from her while he caught his breath, back against the wall, shoulders tight with pain he was pretending not to feel. The Spider—she supposed that was as good a name as any—looked wrecked. Not dramatically so. No theatrical clutching or groaning. Just small tells. The way his chest rose a little too fast. The way his hand kept flexing like it wasn't sure it still belonged to him. The way he shifted his weight without meaning to, trying to find a position that didn't hurt.

It should have been worse. It would have been worse for anyone else.

That alone told her more than he probably realized.

He was young. Younger than she'd first thought, now that the adrenaline had drained and the city had gone quiet around them. Not a kid, but close enough that it made her reassess things. The jokes weren't just bravado—they were nervous energy, poorly disguised, bleeding through the mask in the only way it could.

She cataloged him on instinct. Movement first. He moved like nothing she'd ever seen—fluid, unthinking, like gravity was more of a suggestion than a rule. Even with her gear, even with training drilled into muscle memory, he had outpaced her. Not effortlessly, but naturally. Clinging to walls without tech. Strength that wasn't bulky or obvious, but devastating when he applied it. He'd handled that thing—redirected it, fought it, survived it.

And survived this.

Ordinary men didn't get thrown through windows, scraped along buildings, and pinned to concrete by a flying nightmare and then sit up afterward cracking jokes. Ordinary men died.

"What? I got blood on my mask or something?" he asked, touching his chin. "That's part of the reason I'm wearing red, you know? Because it hides the blood better."

She blinked, momentarily thrown.

"Is this you being nervous," she asked, "or are you just like this all the time?"

"I said I joke when I'm nervous…" He gestured vaguely at himself, rainwater dripping from his sleeve. "But this? This is just me. Disappointed?"

The question caught her off guard. Not flirtatious. Not defensive. Just… curious. Like he actually cared what she thought.

"No," she said, and realized she meant it. "Just trying to figure you out. That's all."

"There's not much to figure out," he replied. "I'm just a guy trying to help out where I can."

She scoffed, because that was easier than admitting the words landed.

"Really? Am I supposed to believe that?"

The corner of her mouth betrayed her anyway, lifting before she could stop it.

"What?"

"You expect me to believe you dress up like that because you want to help?"

"Eh. Doesn't matter if you believe me or not. It's the truth." He tugged at his mask, adjusting it higher on his nose. "Ugh, that's better. It's really hard to breathe in this thing when it's soaked."

She watched the motion without meaning to. The casualness of it. The vulnerability. The way he didn't seem worried she'd take advantage of the moment.

That was… new.

Most men she met—most people—were angles and exits and contingency plans. They watched her hands. They watched her eyes. This one just talked. Hurt and exhausted and still trying to make the moment lighter, like if he didn't, the weight of it all might crush him.

Felicia leaned back against the wall opposite him, folding one leg over the other. She kept her distance, but not as much as she usually would. She told herself it was strategic. Easier to bolt if Red came back. Easier to read him up close.

That explanation felt thinner the longer she sat there.

She noticed the way his voice shifted when he wasn't joking—lower, steadier. The way he'd put himself between her and that thing without hesitation. The way he'd said her name.

That part still bothered her. Not because he'd known it—but because he'd used it like it mattered.

Attraction wasn't fireworks or sudden heat. Not for her. It was curiosity that refused to shut up. It was the question of why lingering longer than it should. It was the dangerous thought that maybe, just maybe, this one wasn't lying to her.

And that scared her more than the monster with metal talons ever could.

"So," Felicia said at last, laying her head back against the wall, eyes on the dark ceiling above them. "I'm listening."

"Where do you want me to start?" he asked, smiling softly, though the smile didn't quite reach his eyes. There was a tint of red at the corner of his lips, his own blood smeared there like an afterthought, and for some reason the sight of it bothered her more than she expected.

"Might as well start with the obvious," Felicia said, folding her arms loosely, posture casual even as every muscle stayed ready. "How do you know who I am?"

That was the million-dollar question. She replayed it in her own head while she waited for his answer, watching the way his chest rose and fell, the way he favored one side just a little. It wasn't like she was famous. Her mask wasn't as dramatic as his, but it did its job—tinted lenses to hide her eyes, subtle contouring built into the material to distort her features under low light. Enough to make eyewitness accounts unreliable. She could've worn the hoodie tonight, sure, but the rain would've weighed it down, slowed her. That was why she'd gone with the cropped jacket instead. Mobility over anonymity. She'd made that choice consciously.

Which made the fact that he knew who she was… unsettling.

"It's a little hard to explain," Spider said finally, voice quieter now, more careful. "But I know who your father is." He paused, as if gauging her reaction, then added, "It wasn't something I found out easily. Give your old man props—he's good at covering his tracks." He rolled his left shoulder, wincing before he could stop himself. "That guy—the one who attacked you—his partner, I'm guessing, came after me because of something that… happened to me. Something that altered my DNA. Given the fact you don't seem like the type to go out of your way to put yourself in danger like this, it had to be for something important."

Felicia felt the words settle in her chest like a stone. She didn't like how easily he'd cut through her. Didn't like how reasonable he sounded about it. For a second, she considered lying—throwing out a half-truth, something sharp enough to end the conversation and send him on his way. But then she remembered him stepping between her and that thing in the sky. Remembered the sound of metal tearing into brick instead of her.

"It's my father," she admitted softly. Saying it out loud felt worse than she expected, like pressing on a bruise she'd been pretending wasn't there. "A few weeks ago, I came home to our apartment trashed. Dad was gone, but there was blood everywhere."

Spider's shoulders dropped just a fraction, the humor draining out of him as something heavier took its place.

"So you took up his mantle in order to find him?" he said after a beat. "That's noble. I'm sure he'd be proud."

"I doubt that," Felicia said, a humorless breath slipping out of her. "He wouldn't want me to be a hero."

"Then why are you doing it?" he asked. Not accusing. Genuinely asking. "I mean, if you know that?"

"Because he's all I got."

The words came out steadier than she felt. They hung between them, ugly and honest. Spider didn't rush to fill the silence, and she found herself appreciating that more than she should.

"How'd the Angry Bird come into this?" he asked instead, tone shifting just enough to give them both an out.

"Dad's trail went to an Oscorp archive," Felicia said. "Somebody was looking for the same thing he was. And that thing tried to kill me to get it."

"The Oscorp Archive?" Spider repeated. "When was that?"

"September twenty-third."

He went quiet. Not frozen—thinking. She watched the way his jaw tightened beneath the mask, the way his fingers flexed once at his side like he was resisting the urge to clench them. "That ring a bell?" she asked.

"Yeah," he said slowly, nodding. "Yeah, it does. That was a few days after I got into it with the other one." There was something off in his tone then, a subtle withdrawal, like a door clicking shut. She clocked it immediately. Whatever he wasn't saying there, he wasn't ready to. Pushing would only make him dig in. "I'm guessing whatever you found in the Archive is why you went to the penthouse, right?"

"Yeah," Felicia said. Then, after a second, "But I'm not telling you what it was. I don't trust you." She met his gaze squarely. "Even if you put yourself in harm's way for me, I'm not telling you."

To his credit, he didn't argue. Didn't guilt her. He studied her for a long moment instead, head tilting slightly, as if fitting pieces together that only he could see. Then he sighed and pushed himself to his feet, the movement careful despite the strength beneath it.

"I don't need to ask," he said. "I think I already know."

Her stomach tightened. "Oh?"

"It's research," he said, choosing his words like each one had weight. "Genetically altered species. Experiments. Stuff that should've stayed buried."

"How do you—"

"Because," he cut in gently, and for the first time since they'd met, the joke-edge in his voice was completely gone, "the other guy didn't come after me by accident. And whatever they were doing back then… it didn't stop." He hesitated, hand lifting toward his chest before dropping again. "That research is why I'm like this."

Felicia studied him then—not just the mask, not just the suit, but the man underneath trying very hard not to sound like he was confessing something. She saw the strain in the way he stood, the way his humor had been a shield more than a personality trait. Superhuman, sure—but not untouchable. Not invincible. And definitely not comfortable with what he'd become.

This could go sideways fast. She could walk out, disappear back into the city with more questions than answers. Or she could stay, sit here in the aftermath of violence and rain and bad decisions, and see where this led. Partnership. Another fight. Something messier than either of them were ready for.

"Then you know about the guy in the Jackal mask, right?" she asked, watching him closely as she said it. The reaction was immediate—subtle, but unmistakable. His head tilted just a fraction, shoulders stiffening like she'd tugged on a loose wire she wasn't supposed to see. Not fear. Surprise. The kind you get when someone says a name you didn't expect them to know.

"I guess not," she added lightly, filing the reaction away.

"You said a Jackal mask?" he repeated.

"Yeah. Why?"

"Nothing." He shrugged, too casual, the movement a little stiff like it pulled on something sore. "Look, mutated vulture-men and guys in Jackal masks are apparently my new normal." A beat. Then, quieter, more serious. "But I gotta ask. What are you planning on doing with that research? How is that supposed to help you find your dad?"

Felicia exhaled slowly, leaning her head back against the wall. The concrete was cold through the thin padding of her suit, grounding in a way she needed. The room felt different now—not tense like it had been when Red was somewhere out there in the city, but not safe either. It felt… suspended. Like they were both standing on the edge of a decision neither of them wanted to name yet.

"I don't know," she admitted. The honesty surprised her even as it left her mouth. "But Jackal has him. That's all I know. And the longer I spend trying to find him, the more likely it's going to be too late."

She hated how small the words sounded compared to the weight they carried. How helpless. She wasn't used to saying things like that out loud. Plans, routes, contingencies—that was her language. Not fear. Not the possibility of being too late.

The Spider didn't interrupt. He didn't fill the silence with a joke. That, more than anything else, made her look at him again. Really look this time.

He was pacing slightly now, not in circles, just shifting his weight from foot to foot like his body didn't know what to do with the excess adrenaline. His movements were quieter than they had any right to be for someone built like him—no wasted motion, no showboating. Even hurt, he moved like the room belonged to him. But there was an edge of uncertainty there too, something almost boyish in the way he rubbed at the back of his neck before finally stopping in front of her.

"Felicia," he said, and her name sounded different coming from him now—less like a callout in a fight, more like something personal. "If you want, I can help you."

The words came out abruptly, like he hadn't rehearsed them. There was a hitch of nervousness in his voice that he clearly hated, like it betrayed him. She noticed the way his shoulders squared after, bracing for rejection. It was… kind of cute, in a dorky way. Disarming in a way she didn't trust.

"You've got a target on your back," he continued, gaining confidence as he went, "and so do I. We'd have a better shot working together."

Felicia studied him in silence. Partnership was a dangerous word. It implied reliance. Implied staying. Implied she couldn't just disappear the moment things got complicated.

People were liabilities. People got captured. People got you killed.

She smirked, because smirking was easier than admitting any of that.

"Don't you know, Spider?" she said lightly. "It's bad luck to cross a black cat's path."

"Not always," he chuckled, relief bleeding into the sound before he could stop it. "The offer's there if you want to."

The rain outside softened to a distant hiss, like the city itself was listening in and pretending not to. Felicia pushed off the wall and stood, stretching her arms overhead in a lazy motion that let her keep her eyes on him the entire time. She noticed the way his gaze flicked away—not flustered exactly, but aware. Respectful. That mattered more than she expected.

"Am I supposed to trust you because of what you did?" she asked.

He didn't answer right away. Instead, he looked at her—really looked. Not like she was a puzzle to solve or a threat to neutralize. Like she was a person standing in front of him, bleeding and tired and stubborn.

"I don't think you would have come back for me," he said carefully, "if you didn't feel like you could."

Felicia felt it settle somewhere uncomfortable, right behind her ribs. He wasn't wrong. She could rationalize it a dozen different ways—risk management, distraction, unfinished business—but none of them erased the simple truth. She'd turned back. She'd chosen him over the clean escape.

She didn't answer immediately. Instead, she walked past him, slow and deliberate, circling once like she was inspecting him from every angle. The Spider stayed still, letting her. Trust, maybe. Or stupidity. She hadn't decided yet. She noted the dried blood at his collar, the way his suit was torn in places it shouldn't be. The fact that he didn't hide any of it.

Partnerships didn't start like this. They usually started with leverage. With secrets traded like currency. This felt messier. More dangerous.

Felicia stopped in front of him again, close enough now that she could hear his breathing, steady but strained. She met his gaze through the mask, searching for the lie she expected to find.

"Just so we're clear," she said quietly, "I don't play sidekick. And I don't make promises I can't keep."

He nodded immediately.

"Wouldn't ask you to."

That, more than anything else, sealed it. Not agreement. Not trust. But the sense that whatever this was, it wasn't going to be simple—and that walking away now might haunt her more than staying ever could.

Felicia exhaled, slow and controlled, then gave him a small, crooked smile.

"Hopefully it's good enough to find your dad."

The words landed heavier than he probably intended. Felicia felt it in the way her chest tightened, in the way the thought of finding him suddenly felt less like a fantasy and more like something fragile she was afraid to touch too hard. She didn't let it show. She rarely did.

He turned toward the door, one hand already reaching for the handle, posture shifting into that alert, ready-to-move stance she'd come to recognize. The moment was ending. That much was clear.

Before she could overthink it, she reached out and grabbed his wrist. The fabric of his suit was still damp, warm beneath her fingers. He startled—actually startled—and for half a second she saw it: the flash of wide-eyed surprise in the sliver of exposed skin before instinct kicked back in.

"Hey," she said, not unkindly. "You know my name. Doesn't feel fair that I don't know yours."

He looked down at her hand, then back up at her. For a heartbeat, she thought he might say it. That he might just give it to her, easy as that.

"Call me Spider-Man," he said instead.

She scoffed.

"That's not what I meant."

"I know," he replied, and there was a smile in his voice even before she saw it curve beneath the mask. He gently slipped his wrist from her grip and pulled the mask back into place, the red fabric sealing him off again. "Trust goes both ways, Cat. Prove I can trust you, and maybe I'll tell you."

Her lips curved despite herself.

"Oh, how mysterious of you," she said, exaggerating the pout just enough to make it playful. "I'm going to find out."

"I'm counting on it."

He stepped to the door, pausing just long enough to glance back at her.

"Meet me here tomorrow. Seven P.M. If you're here, I'll take it as us working together. If not…" He shrugged lightly. "I'll understand."

She crossed her arms, leaning back against the wall again, watching him like she was committing the moment to memory. "And if I'm late?"

"Then I'll assume you're making an entrance," he said. "Be careful."

"Right back at you."

He opened the door, rain-slick night air rushing in with the distant hum of the city. Without another word, he stepped out onto the rooftop. Felicia followed just far enough to watch him climb the ledge, the storm catching the red and blue of his suit as if the city itself wanted a good look. For a second, he stood there silhouetted against the skyline—still, poised, like he was listening to something only he could hear. Then his arm shot out, a web line snapping into the darkness, and he was gone, swinging away in a smooth arc that vanished between buildings.

Felicia stood there longer than she meant to, eyes tracking the empty space he'd left behind. She didn't smile. Not exactly. But there was a lightness in her chest she hadn't felt in weeks. The constant edge, the breathless panic that had followed her since the archive, since the blood and the silence and the unanswered questions—it had eased. Just a little. Enough that she noticed its absence.

For the first time in a long while, she wasn't alone with it.

Then the city swallowed him completely, the sound of rain and traffic rushing back in to fill the quiet. The weight returned almost immediately, settling into her bones like a familiar ache. Jackal. Red. Her father. The clock still ticking somewhere she couldn't see.

Felicia exhaled slowly and straightened, fingers brushing the hidden pocket where the USB waited. Panic or not, the game was still on.

And tomorrow night, at seven, she had a decision to make.





Meanwhile…





"All things considered, that went well." Peter sighed as I landed on the rooftop where I hid my book bag. I should have put it in a better spot, preferably a little closer to the bridge so I didn't have to cross back over into Queens.

"Yeah, I agree."

"I'm surprised you managed to keep yourself from blushing in front of her."

"Hey, come on…"

"You're the one who fanboyed when you realized it was Felicia. I'm just saying," he chuckles, much to my displeasure. "Look, you did good."

"Then why are you giving me shit over it?!"

"Because, if I let you sit in your head, I'm going to have a headache…"

"How the hell does that work? Can you even feel pain right now?"

"That's beside the point. The point is, you just met Felicia. You fought another Vulture… and this time you don't look like roadkill."

I shake my head, slipping back into my regular clothes. I'll need to keep on my jacket and hope that I don't bleed too much before I can get to Oscorp. I'm not trying to go through all of my web fluid, and I'm too damn tired to keep swinging. It's not even that I'm tired. I feel like I could stay up for the rest of the day right now, but I need time to relax, to think and clear my head.

But Pete's right. I just met Felicia Hardy. Somehow, every expectation I had for her was blown out of the water in that meeting. I knew, I knew that she was gorgeous. But she was on an entirely different level. How the hell am I supposed to keep my cool around someone like that? Don't get me wrong, I had more things on my mind than just her, but come on!

Climbing down to the street, bag slung over my shoulder, I kept replaying the events of the last couple hours in my head. Another Vulture, and apparently it attacked the archive. Why didn't Norman tell me about it? If he knew about it, and didn't tell me… I'm going to be pissed. I should have been told about it.

Oh, 'you were still recovering and I didn't want you to put yourself in danger' isn't going to cut it Norman. All this time he's been helping me, and he's kept that from me? Jesus, how am I supposed to trust him if he hides shit from me?

"We going to talk about what's really bothering you?" Peter pipes in, cutting my train of thought.

"I'd rather not."

"Come on. Felicia saw how you reacted when she brought up the guy in the Jackal mask. From one web-head to another, tell me what's going on in that noggin."

Fine.

I step onto the sidewalk, keeping my head down as I make my way for the train station. Missing school like this is going to be bad in the long run, but I'll figure something out.

Alright. It did set off a red flag when she brought it up.

"Why is that significant?"

"You're the one with access to my memories, aren't you? How do you not know this?"

"I told you, there's parts of your memories I can't see, just like there's parts of mine that you don't have access to. Apparently, Jackal mask is one of them."

"My knowledge of this is pretty fuzzy, but there's only a few people that I know that would ever wear a Jackal mask. And before you ask, yes… they do go by 'The Jackal.' Coincidentally, one of them was a clone of you."

"Me?" Peter asks, shock evident in his tone.

"Yep. If I remember correctly, Ben Reilly was the clone that wore the mask."

"Ben Reilly?"

"It's a long story, but you know how I mentioned in our one conversation that there was a whole Clone Saga with Spider-Man?"

"Vaguely, you were talking about a lot that night."

"Ben Reilly was a clone of Peter Parker/Spider-Man, created by Dr. Miles Warren. Warren was a fucking nut-job geneticist with a weird obsession with Gwen Stacy. There was a whole ordeal where Peter and Ben ended up swapping roles, because somehow Peter was considered the clone. The whole Clone Saga in a nutshell was a mess. But notably there were a few clones that spawned. Ben Reilly, Kaine, and in the Ultimate Universe's version of it, Jessica Drew."

"Well, that's totally not going to haunt me. This Dr. Warren, he was the Jackal?"

"Yep. Ben adopted the persona at one point in the comics. As far as I know, Warren never wore the mask."

"Then how was he the Jackal?"

"Like most of Spider-Man's villains, the name was associated with a costume. He had on this green, furry bodysuit that made him look like a monster." I chuckle dryly. That was a tacky costume, but if it were an actual transformation, it'd look awesome.

"You should look into him. See if he's following that same path."

"I'd love to, but given the circumstances, I'm not sure if Warren is going to fall into the same old patterns."

I get to the train station.

"Really? This is what you're uncertain about? You were gung-ho on the idea that Adrian Toomes was the Vulture from the get-go. You've been right so far."

I haven't been right so far. That is literally the only thing I was right about.

"Fine, fine. If you're not certain Warren is the Jackal, then who are the other suspects?"

"You say suspects like it's so simple. The Jackal, whoever he is, clearly has knowledge in the field of genetics. If Toomes was experimented on and turned into that monstrosity, then it's likely the Red Vulture is the same way. Whatever was stored in the Archives, he was willing to send Red Vulture after it. Felicia was unfortunate enough to be there when it happened. So now, she's in danger because of it. Somehow, her dad's mixed into this. I might have read comics and had a decent amount of knowledge, but this goes beyond that." I clench my jaw. I'm disappointed in myself. Hell, if I were in a discord chat with Mand and the others right now, they'd lay into me for forgetting something as important as this. Especially Mand. Fucking asshole. "That's what scares me. The fact I don't know."

"Then let's move to something we do know, okay?" Peter asks, and I nod, much to my own displeasure. "Felicia broke into Norman's penthouse because of the research she found in the Archive. You need to talk with Norman and see if you can get him to tell you about the Archive attack. If he's really hiding something, you should be able to find out. But if he doesn't, then that means there's only one other person we know that is technically the face of Oscorp right now and has the power to hide information like that from Norman."

I pause, realizing that he's right.

"Smythe…"

"So, either way it looks like we're going to Oscorp."

Lucky us.




AN: I didn't expect to get this chapter out so fast, but I was in the mood to write last night. I'm very happy with how these chapters are turning out. Reception as always is higher than I could have ever anticipated.

So, Peter and Felicia might be working together now. And Peter now is aware of the Jackal. But who is he? Is it Miles Warren, or is it someone completely different? Hmm...

Anyway, I'm going to leave this as short and sweet just because I don't have much to say. What I will say is, please leave a comment as it does help me see whether people are reading and enjoying this. Thoughts are appreciated, and it helps motivate me to keep writing. The more comments I get, the faster I generally write. It's weird, but that's how I operate!

As always, if you're interested in seeing more... I do have a Patreon where you can get up to five chapters early access. I also post commissioned artworks for my stories there, as well as original projects that will be coming in the future.

Want to talk about the story? I have a discord server where you can do that! Link will be down below.

Let me know what you think, and I shall see you all very soon.



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


https://www.patreon.com/c/Arsenal597
discord. gg /dQkeJPkxdD
 
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