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#our two losers need to be in love pronto
etherealising · 5 months
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oh girl, the way ch 10 made me so sad :((( but i loved it still. it felt so delicately and beautifully written. it is so clear that you put so much care and caution into writing this chapter. it was so sad but so sweet seeing baby and carmy get some of the healing they deserve. i love it -<3
me as well girly it was so sad to write but i’m glad you loved it!!! thank you so much!!! i’ve been doing my best at making the harder hitting chapters genuine and not really shock valueish just kind of like a delicate peak into the life of these two flawed characters who love each other so much. its going to be so sad when their story ends and i’m def not ready for it but seeing them grow together has been great, they deserve all the happiness and i appreciate the love you have for this story!
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ode2rin · 1 year
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and i do, promise
pairing. itoshi sae x gn!reader
genre. fluff | a bit of comfort | established relationship | soft!sae (._.) 
content/warnings. 1.5k+ wc | characters are aged up ! | maybe slightly ooc | talks of marriage | heavy in narration! | minimal proofread | from this ask lmao
in which: you and sae had a talk about your non-negotiables in your future married life.
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“and i think we need a dog or a cat, a big fluffy one who will follow me everywhere because it has separation anxiety,” you exclaimed, turning to your lover from where he was sitting.
you and your boyfriend of five years were having one of your conversations about settling down. it wasn't a new topic between the two of you, and you appreciated that he was the one who often brought it up. after you welcomed him home, he would ask you questions about your vision for the future. 
tonight, he asked you what your non-negotiables were. 
given who he is, it always makes you happy that your lover, itoshi sae, was always the one who started these conversations. he respected your wishes of not being a fan of surprises or grand proposals. you remembered how he had brought it up on the night of your fifth anniversary, seemingly out of the blue, which was so unlike him.
“you woke me up just to ask if i want to marry you?”
“yeah, but i’m not saying it has to be now. only when you’re ready —”
“the answer is yes. now shut up and let me sleep, sae.”
the morning after, he asks you one more time, while handing you your coffee he made. just to be sure he heard you right, he says. and once again, you gave him the same answer you did when you were still drowsy.
and that's how you found yourself babbling to him about the pet of your dreams, while sae listened attentively, finding your excitement infectious. he thought it was oddly specific, but for now, he simply replied, “sure…” because he loved the way your eyes sparkled, knowing how thrilled you were to spend your life with him.
you are this excited to start a life with him, while sae would not even think for a moment that there's someone on this earth who can tolerate him for more than an hour (his manager made that very apparent). 
yet here you were, wanting him for life. to itoshi sae, that's as bizarre as the idea of cars flying around. 
so who was he to deny any of your requests? anything you had in mind, he'll get it done. pronto, if he could.
“how about our taxes, love? i don't think i can do that,” you shyly admitted, approaching him. sae instinctively tapped his lap, silently inviting you to sit.
besides, with his net worth, you're not even sure if it could be managed by one person. let alone by you. 
“i'll take care of that,” he said while tucking a strand of hair behind your ear. you beam at his reply.
what was the point of having all that money if you had to stress over the mundane? if it were up to sae, he would tell you to simply focus on loving him, in which he would never since he thinks that it’s such a loser thing to say.
“and i want a house by the beach,” you continued, “it doesn't have to be big, but i want it to have big windows and a balcony where you can spend your days off looking at the sea.”
“why?” sae asked curiously, a smile tugging at the corner of his lips.
you looked at him, a mixture of surprise and conviction on your face. “because you love the sea, and i happen to love you, so it's non-negotiable, sae.”
sae doesn't need a mirror to know his own eyes softened at what you said. Ever since you broke your way into his life, you've done nothing but melt his cold heart with your warm smiles.
he thinks you got him down so bad, yet what's even funnier, he doesn't even see himself getting back right up.
“but how about you?” you whispered softly, your gaze shifting to his hands intertwined with yours, “what's on your mind?”
you. 
he’s thinking of how five years with you made him believe that a lifetime wouldn't be enough time to love you.
just you and him, looking at the sea from the balcony of your soon to be shared home. the image of waking up beside you every morning, making your coffee before you wake up, doing laundry and taxes with you — just the mere thought of sharing a life with you, all of it were consuming his thoughts.
sae would not be able to explain to his younger self how someone like him could be loved like this. younger itoshi sae would think he's such a lukewarm loser if he had known how the older sae couldn't even take a nap without you by his side, gently scratching his nape. how older sae struggles in overseas games now because he misses the weight of your head on his arm and the feeling of your breath on his neck when he cuddles you to sleep. 
and most of all, the younger itoshi sae would have never, ever imagined asking someone to marry him.
yet here he is, making a mental note of your requests. from the oddly specific fluffy pet down to your shared home, he had it memorized.
but as much as sae would dare to give you the world, to provide you with the best life imaginable, he knew that there would always be moments of challenge. 
because sae knows, he knows for sure – that the rain is always gonna come if you're standing with him.
the constant presence of the press, the strains of long-distance, and the voices of people who didn't truly know him beyond his performances on the field would always be there, trying to interfere with your relationship. 
and above all, sae's own flaws and bad habits would always unintentionally make their presence known.
your itoshi sae, who can give you the world, yet can only give you this much.
would that be fine? would that be enough? do you really want that to be your reality all these years to come? sae needs to know.
and so with a gulp, sae turned his head away from you and mustered the courage to ask the question that weighed heavily on his heart.
“are you fine with me giving you a life of fixing bad habits through arguments?”
as the words left his lips, sae felt your hand pause its gentle caress of his knuckles. it felt as if time stood still, and his heart skipped a beat, fearful of your response.
please. 
suddenly, sae found himself entranced by the weight of his necklace, the sleek chain pulling at his consciousness. its significance weighed heavily upon him, for nestled within it was a ring he had bought two years ago that he recently put in his necklace before coming home to you. 
one might say that it was an impulsive purchase. but to sae, he knew it all along that he belongs to you. the ring was just a mere material of his love.
as the tension mounted, sae's shoulders grew even more tense, his every nerve on edge. he felt your sudden shift on his lap, and his heart skipped a beat. moments later, your hands gently cupped his jaw, guiding his gaze to meet yours.
“will you choose us in every single argument?”
us.
you and him. 
it’s enough and more.
in that moment, a part of you knew that you didn't even need his verbal confirmation, for it was written in the depths of his captivating teal eyes. you both would choose each other, time and time again.
“only if you promise me that it's you and me against the problem, and it's never you against me,” you implored, the raw emotion in your voice resonating with his heart. “forget the pet, the house, and the taxes. this, sae. this is my non-negotiable.”
sae stared at you, his gaze unwavering, for what felt like an eternity. eventually, he reached for your left hand, which rested on his cheek. with utmost tenderness, he lifted it, bringing it eye level with both of your faces. closing his eyes, he pressed his lips against your knuckles, lingering a little longer on your ring finger.
“i promised to meet all of your terms, didn’t i? i promise you everything, anything,” he vowed, “you have my word for it, y/n.”
the sincerity of his words made your face flush with warmth. after all these years, he never failed to make you swoon. you wrapped both of your arms around his neck, pulling him closer into an embrace. nuzzling against his neck, you whispered, “do you promise?”
“with my damn life.”
a smile graced your lips as you nestled against him. “good. now, what are your terms for me, mr. itoshi?”
feeling his lips press against your temple, you relished in the tenderness of his touch. sae reached into his shirt, retrieving something from his necklace. your eyes followed his movements, and you gasped as you felt a cold band sliding onto your ring finger. looking up, you saw sae smiling lovingly at you.
“wear this all the time, and the one after this,” as sae's words lingered in the air, he leaned in, his lips meeting yours in a delicate and tender kiss.
with a soft sigh, sae pulled away ever so slightly, his eyes locked with yours, their depths shimmering with adoration. the ghost of a smile played upon his lips as he savored the moment, his thumb brushing gently against your cheek, tracing the contours of your face.
“that's my only non-negotiable.”
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note. shit writing because i hate him. i swear i’ll fight him i swear swear swear. in case, i haven’t said it enough, i hate him. bye.
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nothingbutimagines · 4 years
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Elizabeths (Chapter I)
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Pairing: Bad boy!Peter Parker x Reader
Warning: Cursing, death, mentions of suicide
Summary: Y/n is part of her high school’s most powerful and most popular clique, but she disapproves of the other girls’ behavior. When Y/n meets the new boy in school, Peter Parker, and begins dating him, what she has known to be her clique begins to unravel. Starting with the death of the clique leader, Liz Allan, one by one, people Y/n doesn’t like begin to die by her and Peter’s hands. Soon, she realizes that Peter is killing students he hates and begins to try to foil his plans, all while clashing with the new clique leader, Elizabeth “Betty” Brant.
Author: Dizzy
A/N: This is a Peter Parker AU I thought of doing. It’s a Heathers AU!!! This is going to follow a similar plot to Heathers, but of course, I won’t keep everything the exact same. Here, we meet our protaganist, Y/n, and our love interest, JD Peter.
Masterlist Request Any Of These Peter Parker/Tom Holland Masterlist
__________________
Dear Diary, 
Today, Liz told me she teaches people about “real life”. 
She said, “Real life sucks losers dry. If you wanna fuck with the eagles, you gotta learn to fly.” 
I asked, “So you teach people how to fly?” 
She said, yes. 
I said, “You’re beautiful.”
“Y/n,” a voice pulled you away from your writing as they kicked your side. 
You pulled your glasses off and looked up at the owner of the yellow skirt and white tights that kicked you. 
“What the fuck, Lizzie?” You snapped, pushing Lizzie Jones’ foot away from you. 
“Sorry, Y/n. Liz needs you in the commons. She said it’s urgent. Back me up, Betty.” 
“Yeah, Y/n, Liz said you have to hit the commons pronto.” Betty stammered, her arms tight around her books.
“Fine. I’m coming.” You rose from your spot on the stairs and followed the other girls. “Do you know what it’s about?”
Lizzie looked back at you. “How the hell am I supposed to know? She just said to get you.”
As you turned the corner and into the madhouse that was the common area, you caught sight of the brown hair that was tied back with a red scrunchie.
“Hello, Liz.” You spoke softly, almost submissive to the girl. 
“Y/n, there you are.” Liz smiled, her voice sickly sweet which made you think she’d want something from you.
If you knew anything about Liz Allan, it was that she always, always was nice when she wanted something from you. 
“What is it you need, Liz?” You asked, crossing your arms over your chest. 
“I need you to help me get into Brad’s email to send Ass-trid Dumptruck. I want you to help me write a hot and heavy but realistically low-key essay that Astrid can’t help but read right now.”
“Liz, I don’t have anything against Astrid Dunstock.” 
“You don’t have anything for her, either.” Liz replied, shoving the laptop into your hands. “Just get into the email so I can write her a sexy letter to fuel her shower nozzle masturbation for weeks.”
“Let me think about it.”
“Don’t think.” Liz scoffed. “Just do it.”
You groaned as the other girls giggled, holding the laptop in one arm and attempting to type with the other. You furrowed your brow as you took in a deep breath, annoyed at your own inability to fight against peer pressure. 
“Betty, Y/n can’t possibly type with one hand. Bend over so she can work.” Liz smirk.
Betty gave you a look as you mouthed that you were sorry before the girl bent over in front of you and you began to type on the laptop, finding your way to Brad’s email. 
This wasn’t the first time Liz was having you send emails from Brad’s account, so you already knew the password, mumbling to yourself about how ignorant Liz could be as you pulled up the draft email page. 
“Alright, Liz. You’re in.” 
“Why don’t you type it up, Y/n? My nails just got done and it’s hard to type with them.” Liz said, wiggling her fingers in front of you, her nails long and sharp like claws and done in her signature red color. 
You knew she was lying, as she could never tell the truth. She just didn’t want to have the evidence trailed back to her. 
“Come on, Liz. I don’t want to do this.” You said, throwing your arms down and turning to the other girl.
“Do you think I give a shit?” Liz snapped back. “Just write the fucking email and then we can move on with our lives. Besides, you’re the only one who could possibly get down Brad’s diction.”
“Go fuck yourself.” You mumbled as you turned around, feeling Betty giggle from beneath you. 
“Would you like to speak up, Y/n?” Liz asked, moving to look at you from the side.
You gave her a smirk. “No, Liz. Now, why don’t you tell me what to write?”
Liz cleared her throat before speaking softly, her lips brushing against the hair by your ear, her breath hot and her voice soft, sending shivers down your spine. 
“Okay, Y/n, why don’t we keep it short and simple? Get in and get out, just like Brad would.” Liz said. 
“And you know that all too well.” 
You could feel Liz press her sharp nail into your cheek, the pressure so sharp you thought she was about to draw blood. Your proud attitude quickly diminished as she huffed, taking her nail off your face as you sighed and quickly typed up the email. 
“Alright. I’m done writing.” You announced, straightened up as you picked the laptop off of Betty’s back, and handed the laptop to Liz. “Just hit send and Astrid will get it right away.” 
“Come on people, let’s give that leftover lunch money to people without lunches! Those tater tots you threw away are a delicacy in Africa! Their Thanksgiving dinner!” You could hear Ned scream into the crowd of students in the common area as you took a seat beside LIz at your regular lunch table. 
“God, aren’t they fed yet?” Lizzie asked, taking a bite out of a french fry she took off your plate before flinging it back down on the plate, the ketchup splattering on the rest of your food. “Do they even have Thanksgiving in Africa?”
“Oh, yeah. Pilgrims, Indians, tater tots.” You replied as you ate the other half of the french fry, “I heard it’s a real party continent.”
Liz rustled in her bag beside you, gaining your attention as you watched her pull out a clipboard and slam it down on the table. She gave you a smile as she proudly flipped her hair over her shoulder while she watched your face fall and you internally groaned. 
“Y/n, guess what time it is?” 
“Ouch, lunchtime poll.” You guessed, setting down the milk carton in your hand as you turned to her. “So, what’s the question?”
“Yeah, what’s the question?” Betty asked, earning a swift kick from Liz.
“Goddamn, Betty, you were on FaceTime with me when I thought of it.”
“Oh, right. I forgot.”
“Such a pillowcase.” Liz scoffed, pulling you up with her as she stood up and began leading you through the crowded tables and into the large aisle of the common room. 
“This wouldn’t be about that bizarre dream you had the other night that were blabbing about on the phone would-”
“Oh, shut up. It is.” Liz cut you off. “I told Ned if he gave me another political topic, I would spit on him and he said if I didn’t want to do that, I’d have to think of my own poll.” 
You shook your head, looking away from her as you scanned the large room. Your eyes landed on a boy you’ve never seen before, and being in a small town, a guy that looked like him, you would’ve recognized. 
He caught your gaze, the boy who reminded you of James Dean as he slouched in his blue plastic chair, his leather jacket puffing out to the side to reveal the simple t-shirt he was wearing underneath. You couldn’t tell if it was the swooped dark brown hair or the Rebel Without a Cause lunchbox sat in front of him that made you think of the long dead actor, but the boy certainly knew how to get anyone’s attention. 
Transfixed on the boy across the room, you felt a sharp pain in your knee as you crashed into the blue chair of one Cindy Moon. You grunted softly, your hand reaching towards your knee as you bent down to rub it soothingly. 
Cindy turned, pulling her cardigan sweater tightly around her as the rest of her less stylish friends also turned as well, causing you to blush as you straighten up slightly, still a bit bent over as Cindy studied you for a moment. 
“Oh gosh, sorry, Y/n.”
“Oh, Cindy…” You replied softly, the embarrassment hinting in your tone. “I’m, uh, sorry I didn’t make it to your birthday party last month.”
“That’s okay,” Cindy shook her head, “Your mom said you had a big date. Hell, I’d miss my own birthday party for a date.” 
You laughed lightly with her for a moment, glancing over at Liz who was growing impatient as she watched the interaction.
“Don’t say that.” You playfully hit Cindy’s shoulder. 
“Oh, Y/n/n, while you’re here, I found this the other day.” Cindy beamed, picking up her purse and rummaging through it until she pulled out a photo and handed it to you. “I think it's Halloween in second grade.”
“Oh, where we got so sick from the candy that a single spin on that carousel at the Halloween fair-”
“-had us throwing up uncontrollably.” Cindy laughed as she finished your sentence, the warm interaction between you two cut prematurely by Liz’s swift swing pulling you away and causing you to drop the photo.
“Hey, I was talking to someone!” You snapped, tearing away from her. 
“Color me impressed. I thought you were finished playing Barbies with Cindy Moon.” Liz snapped. 
If you didn’t know her any better, you’d have thought Liz was somehow jealous of your interaction with Cindy. 
You followed her like a duckling, almost prancing to keep up with her as you approached the Country Club. You hated them just as much as the next, the daddy’s money boys and girls who were so pretentious they dressed as if they were always at the country club, hence their name. 
“Oh, great, here comes Liz.” You could hear Brittany say as you and Liz approached.
You could feel Liz’s unabashed false pleasantness radiating off of her. You hated the Country Club as much as the next guy, but never as much as Liz Allan did. 
“Hi, Brittany, love the blouse. Oh, let me steal a tater.” Liz greeted, her tone the same sickly sweet as the one she had had with you earlier in the lunch period. 
Brittany watched with a similar fake smile plastered on her face as Liz turned her back to her, now facing you as she pushed the tater tot into her mouth with a single finger, doing a vomiting gesture before chewing and swallowing the tater tot and turning to Brittany and her group. 
“Thanks. I got it at H&M.” Brittany smiled, turning to her group and back at Liz. “I totally blew my allowance.”
“That’s pretty very. Now check this out, David Dobrik gives you a Tesla and $2 million dollars and the same day you get to be on his channel, aliens come to earth and say they’ll blow up the planet in two days. What are you going to do?”
The table looked stunned for a moment and you watched as Flash chuckled, leaned back in his chair and put his sunglasses on. You rolled your eyes at the dramatic action as he started to speak. 
“That’s easy. I’d just hand the wad over to my father. He has the best stock broker in the state. And then I would take that Tesla out for a joyride. Just me, babes, and a car to drive while I fuck a chick in the passanger’s seat.”
“How charming.” You rolled your eyes. “The world will be Pompeii in two days and you’re going to invest your money?”
“Man, my father’s broker could triple it, double it in two days.”
“If I had that money,” Brittany cut in, “I’d give it all to the poor.”
“Wow. You’re beautiful.” You smiled with a nod as Liz jerked you by the arm, pulling you away from the flabbergasted Brittany.
“If you’re openly going to be a bitch…”
“I’m sorry, it’s just why can’t we talk to other kinds of people?” Your voice coming out whinier than you anticipated. 
“Fuck me gently with a chainsaw. Do I look like Mother Teresa to you?” Liz asked, her tongue sharp as you walked alongside her. “If I did, I wouldn't mind talking to the Geek Squad.”
Your gaze followed along the extended arm and pointer finger of Liz’s body as you both made eye contact with one of the boys at the table, causing him to spill his milk all over himself in shock. 
“Oh my god, Elizabeth Number One just made eye contact with me.” He blurted out, stumbling over his words as another boy chuckled.
“It must be love.” The other one replied before you tore your gaze away from them and looked up at Liz, who always seemed to tower over you with her bright red high heeled boots. 
“Doesn’t it bother you that everyone at school thinks you’re a piranha?” You confront her, her eye roll in response making you feel like back peddling what you said.
“Like I give a shit.” She snapped so matter-of-factly. “They all want me as a friend or a fuck. I’m worshipped at Midtown and I’m only a junior.” 
You groaned. “Just pretend you’re doing charity work. Like saving a couple of oiled up penguins in the Dawn commercials. Like this shit will look good on college essays.” 
Liz looked at you in surprise, returning your statement with an eye roll as you had her convinced and she knew it. “Whatever. I don’t believe this shit. We’re going to a Columbia University party and I’m brushing up my conversational skills with the scum of the school.”
Dear Diary,
Sometimes I want to kill Liz Allan. She’s such a bitch saying, “I’m tall, dark, and beautiful. I’m such an individual because I look like a girl in a toothpaste commercial. I’m so hot Post Malone wanted to see my tits for backstage passes.” Damn, you Liz. You’re not special or a princess. All teenagers are the same. Didn’t you see Breakfast Club? 
You pull the clipboard from Liz’s arms as you guide her to the Geek Squad with your hand on her lower back, in a similar way to how your father would push you along in lines at the grocery store. You two stood there awkwardly for a moment before elbowing Liz, causing her to jump. 
“Alright. This is called a lunchtime poll. We ask you a question, you answer honestly. Now, David, whatever his name is, gives you a Tesla and 2 million dollars. When you go to do the big youtube thing, aliens come to the earth and say they’re going to blow it up in two days. What do you do?” Liz muttered, her attitude more sour than it was only moments before. 
“I’d go to the Pyramids.” Brian replied, the bony head of the Geek Squad. “With a girl.”
“Where are you going to get the girl?” the boy beside him asked. “Amazon?”
You couldn’t help but crack a smile as you looked at another boy. “What about you, Lucas?”
“I told you she knew my name.” He muttered to Brian, who in turn, elbowed him in the side. “I’d change my life. Get a new haircut, new clothes, revamp like in She’s All That.” 
“How sad!” Liz exclaimed. “Blowing all your cash to make up for a lack of popularity. And the reference to a chick flick! Did you see it with your mom? Or your new boyfriend?” 
You grabbed Liz by the arm and yanked her from the table and into the large aisle again, right where she had scolded you only minutes before. 
“If you’re openly going to be a bitch…” You trailed off, your tone harsh as Lizzie approached. 
“Ass-trid’s reading the email, you’re going to want to see this.” Lizzie laughed, grabbing you both by the wrists and dragging you behind her as she beelined to where Betty stood, back up against a pillar. 
“Oh god, here we go!” Betty giggled as you four began to watch. 
You suddenly felt sick. You wanted nothing to do with what was about to happen as Astrid rose from her seat at her empty lunch table and made her way towards the Jocks, where Brad sat, munching on his tater tots. You couldn’t understand what Astrid was saying as she pointed to her phone screen, allowing Brad to read it. You flinched as the boy erupted in laughter, food and spit flying from their mouths as they howled, leaving Astrid to run away in horror, leaving you with a pit in your stomach as you jumped away from your friends and into Ned’s table. 
“A penny for your thoughts! But, a dollar could save a life! Hi, Y/n. A five keeps the neighborhood alive! But, a ten will bring back the dead!” Ned shouted, the little chant ringing in your ears as you made eye contact with the James Dean boy again, his look as horrified as your own. 
Liz shoves a twenty dollar bill into Ned’s hand as she approaches you. 
“Shut up.” She orders as the boy grows quiet. “You wanted to be part of the most powerful clique in school and if I wasn’t already the head of it, I’d want the same thing.” 
“I’m sorry, what are you going on about?” You snapped, turning to her. 
“You heard me. That episode with the email back there was for us all to enjoy, but for some reason you are determined to ruin my day.”
“Oh, I’m sorry, let me fix that.” You replied before laughing mockingly. “We made a girl consider suicide! What a laugh! What a scream! I’ve never seen something so funny!”
“Come on, you jerk. You used to have a sense of humor.”
You let Liz guide you back to where Lizzie and Betty stood, talking about whatever book Betty had begun reading as your eyes landed back on the boy you’d found yourself so infatuated with. 
“God, Y/n, drool much?” Lizzie asked, as Liz groaned. “His name’s Peter Parker. He’s in my American History class.”
“Give me back the clipboard.” You ordered, pulling the clipboard from Liz’s hands. 
You sauntered away from the girls, scoffing as Lizzie began making oinking and sexual sounds in your direction and by how fast they were cut off, you knew Liz had probably slapped the other girl to get her to stop. 
“Well, hello, Peter Parker.” You greeted, stopping at a halt on the other side of his table. 
Now standing in front of the boy, you realized he looked less like James Dean and more like a young Jaime Bell.
“Greetings and Salutation. Call me Peter. Are you an Elizabeth?” He asked, the smile on his face a bit cocky. 
You chuckled, a light blush dusting your cheeks. “No, I’m a Y/n. L/n. This may sound like a stupid question…”
“There are no stupid questions.”
“Okay. Get this, David Dobrik gives you 2 million dollars and a Tesla and on the same day he’s supposed to give it to you in a youtube video, aliens invade earth and say they’re going to blow up the planet in two days. What do you do?”
Peter chuckles, his laugh light and airy as he runs a hand through his hair. 
“That’s the stupidest question I’ve ever heard.” He replies, his brow rising as he answers the question curiously. “Probably would just row a boat out into the middle of the lake. Bring along my sax, a bottle of tequila, and some Bach.” 
“How very.” 
“Come on, Y/n!” Lizzie calls from behind you. 
“I’ll be right there! God!” You roll your eyes as you yell, turning your attention back to Peter. “Duty calls. Bye.”
“Later.” 
Dear Diary, 
I take back what I said about killing Liz Allan. I don’t think I’m ready for jail just yet, not with a boy like Peter Parker around. Maybe we’re not all the same after all. 
_____________________
Tagged: @thewinchesterchronicles @spookyanairwin @audreylovespidey706
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ironfidus · 4 years
Text
(un)breakable
Post-IW Iron Dad fanfic.
Read here on AO3 (@a_matter_of_loyalty).
☔︎
Summary:
“We all lost people,” Tony Stark says, his eyes unblinking and sad, devastated and broken, and the heavens weep. 
He‘s right, of course: they all lost people they loved in the Decimation. But it isn’t until the people of Earth realize that even the greatest heroes have been transformed by grief that they finally see the severity of the situation.
(Three weeks after the Decimation that robbed the universe of 50% of its inhabitants, Tony Stark finally re-emerges in the public eye. Only this time, he doesn’t broadcast his message through a press conference, or a professional interview, but rather a televised speech from inside the gym of Midtown School of Science and Technology.)
Or, Tony Stark has everything—until he doesn’t.
☔︎
“What do you think the assembly’s going to be about?” Ned asked quietly. He sounded as curious as ever, his question still drenched in the innocent wonder he always seemed to have an abundance of, but this time his eyes were dull, miserable. His voice, too, was inherently different, no longer carrying his particular brand of cheer and excitement. Instead, his voice was joyless and muted, as if there was no one left to listen to him.
At the very least, that was how Ned felt. Ever since they’d first met in primary school, he and Peter had been inseparable. Whether he was happy, or excited, or upset, or angry, it was always Peter he vented to, rambling on and on to Peter’s seemingly unending patience. Ned had never once imagined that there would come a time when Peter wouldn’t be there to listen to him.
MJ, beside him, blinked almost uncomprehendingly at the question. “I don’t know,” she said honestly—she seemed to do that a lot more now; be honest. “A memorial service in commemoration of all the students and staff members lost, maybe. Or, knowing our school, they’ll just glaze over the Decimation and start lecturing us on safe sex as if—“
She stopped abruptly, her lips slamming shut. For a second, just a second, Ned swore he saw tears gather at the corners of her eyes. But then she blinked again, and the trace of sadness was gone.
Ned swallowed and looked away. MJ may not have been able to bring herself to say it, but he heard the rest of her words regardless: As if anything matters now, in the wake of half the universe going up in flames.
“Right,” Ned croaked out, barely able to recognize his own voice. It was a familiar feeling by now—too many times he had listened to himself speak about meaningless things to his parents over breakfast, or stared into the mirror at his red-rimmed eyes and haunted gaze, and realized he no longer knew who he was.
He hated it. He hated that losing Peter had cost him himself.
He hated that he had lost Peter at all.
“Hey, Leeds,” MJ’s voice broke through his despair. He gazed across the lunch table to find her smiling sadly at him. “You okay?”
Ned flinched at her words. What kind of a question is that? he wanted to demand, wanted to get up in her face and shake his fist and shout until the reality of their situation hit her and her nonchalance fell away. For a second, he thought of doing it, thought of throwing caution to the wind and shattering the fragile balance that had settled between them amidst Peter’s disappearance. 
But the second the words gathered on his tongue, he noticed the tension laced in the hunch of her shoulders and knew he couldn’t do that to her—to either of them. He heaved a sigh, his own shoulders slumping and his anger crumbling.
Because of course he wasn’t okay. Neither of them were.
Frankly, he thought, he would be genuinely surprised if anyone on Earth was okay right now.
“I’m sorry,” Ned said, then, because he didn’t know what else to do. What words were there left to say when everything seemed lost?
MJ stiffened. Ned wondered, for a moment, if she would dismiss his apology and go back to pretending she was unscathed by the Decimation. 
But she didn’t.
Instead, she smiled, a crooked smile that twisted her face and left Ned frozen, and said, “Don’t.”
Just... don’t.
Ned took in a breath. “Okay,” he said, “okay.” Sorries are useless here, Ned, he scolded himself. You know that. Stop throwing words at a problem that can’t be fixed by anything, much less worthless platitudes.
Neither of them were okay.
The other students looked at MJ and saw a heartless girl, emotionless and unbroken when everyone else seemed left in tatters. But Ned looked at MJ and saw someone who wasn’t whole: he saw the falter in her steady stride when she passed Peter’s locker every morning; he saw the furrow in her brow whenever a teacher still called out Peter Parker during attendance and was met with nothing but silence; he saw the way her eyes would dart to the empty space beside Ned every lunch period during their stilted conversations that was always missing something (someone) nowadays; he saw the strain in her expression every time she turned on her phone and was confronted with her wallpaper—Peter’s beaming face pressed between hers and Ned’s.
He saw all the ways she felt Peter’s absence.
Grief didn’t affect MJ the same way it affected Ned. But that didn’t mean she wasn’t affected.
It didn’t mean that the grief didn’t linger, in every nook and cranny of both their lives.
☔︎
When their lunch period ended with the loud, startling ringing of the bell, neither of them jumped. (They didn’t react to much these days.)
MJ simply marked her place in her book with a bookmark (gifted to her by Peter, Ned knew, god he knew), stood up slowly, and offered Ned a nod.
The show of solidarity left Ned breathless. He stared blankly up at her, and a part of him was waiting for someone to chime in with a teasing “Are you waiting for us, MJ? Aw, I always knew you cared!”
But the remark never came. He knew MJ heard it, too—the deafening silence that took up the space left behind by Peter.
Ned pushed himself to his feet eventually, noticing that everywhere around him in the cafeteria, everyone else seemed to be affected by the same sluggishness of loss. He couldn’t blame them.
Every second, he found it harder and harder to breathe in a world that was no longer home to his best friend. It was difficult, almost impossible, to find motivation when Peter used to be the one urging him along at every turn, an encouraging grin on his face.
Ned exhaled shakily and turned away from the memory. He knew if he let himself dwell on Peter now, if he let himself cry, he wouldn’t be able to stop.
“Come on, Leeds,” MJ murmured to him as he rounded the table and stood beside her. Together they stood in silence for another moment, and Ned realized all at once that he hadn’t heard MJ call him ‘loser’ since the Decimation.
He didn’t dare ask why. (He figured he already knew why, anyway. ‘Loser’ was her term of endearment for both him and Peter. It didn’t feel right to leave Peter behind and be the only one worthy of MJ’s bestowed nickname of ‘loser.’)
“I hope they don’t hold a memorial service,” Ned whispered as they crossed the cafeteria and began to head towards the gym. He didn’t know why he said it, only that he meant it. “It feels... condescending, somehow. I don’t know, I just – the other students, they...”
“They didn’t know him,” MJ finished knowingly.
Ned nodded. “They all – they didn’t see the Peter I did.” He paused. “The – the Peter we did, I mean. Sorry, MJ.”
MJ just nodded understandingly. “Yeah,” she said, her voice hushed and almost reverent. It was times like this that reminded Ned that he wasn’t the only one who’d lost Peter. MJ had, too. And – and May, oh god. 
Peter had been all May had left. (Had been. The past tense was killing Ned.)
“Maybe it’ll be a Rapping with Cap video,” Ned mused, and was rewarded with a small, amused smile splitting MJ’s face. It died a second later, but he counted all the victories he could get, no matter how small they were. He had to, or he knew he would go insane.
“Maybe,” MJ agreed. “I hope it isn’t the puberty one.” Her nose scrunched up in distaste, and Ned cracked a quiet laugh.
“Oh my god, please don’t be that one,” he snickered. 
All too quickly, though, the mood grew somber, their grins fading into frowns. The moment felt so incomplete without Peter there to shudder and point out that ‘the puberty PSA isn’t nearly as bad as the sex-ed one, come on guys.’
“Okay,” MJ interjected sharply, “you need to lighten up, pronto.” He just looked at her, unimpressed, and she pointed a finger at him in warning. “That’s an order, Leeds.”
Ned squinted. “Says you,” he snorted, pushing her playfully on the shoulder.
She rolled her eyes at him. “I’m the exception,” she said arrogantly, because she could.
Ned stuck his tongue out. “Conceited, much,” he snarked. “You’d think you—“
His voice died abruptly when they stopped in front of the gym. He wasn’t sure if they were some of the early ones or some of the late stragglers; he used to be able to tell by the degree of chatter and noise escaping through the tiny crack between the gym doors, but these days even a room full of teenagers could be as silent as a graveyard in the dead of night.
Ned winced. Not the best analogy at a time like this, he conceded.
“Well?” MJ’s eyebrow was arched, almost challengingly.
Ned sighed. “Let’s get this over with,” he mumbled, pushing the doors open and ducking inside.
Luckily, they weren’t too late—most of the students had already arrived, but the assembly hadn’t officially started yet and there were still a few seats left untouched. Ned and MJ quickly claimed seats of their own, Ned feeling Peter’s loss especially hard when he found himself looking for only two empty seats side-by-side instead of three.
Once they had settled in, MJ returned to her book, and Ned ended up pulling out his phone. They were both trying, so hard, but sometimes it was just too much of a struggle to pretend that Peter’s absence wasn’t affecting every minute they spent together.
They were still a team, and they still had each other’s backs—he didn’t they could ever stop having each other’s backs, not after everything they’d been through—but it was different now. And sometimes, every time he looked at her, all he saw was Peter not with them. Sometimes, when it was too hard to even try to carry on a conversation, all Ned could hear in the unbearable silence was all the words Peter would have said. All the words he would never say anymore.
Ned hated to admit it, but it was draining. (Everything was draining.)
He realized all too quickly, however, that drifting back to his phone was a mistake. He hadn’t really had the chance to aimlessly browse his phone since before the Decimation—in the past few weeks, he’d only ever used the device to call or text his family and MJ.
But his parents were busy at work, his little sister busy at school, and MJ busy beside him. Without a reason to be on his phone, Ned inevitably found himself launching his photo gallery—
—and staring down at his phone, breath stolen from his lungs.
The most recent photo in his album was of him and Peter on the bus to MoMa. They were both beaming into the camera, Ned’s eyes wide and full of excitement as he flashed a peace sign. Peter, who’d been responsible for capturing the selfie, had been mid-laughter when he took the shot, evident by the blur around his doubtlessly shaking shoulders and the way he’d thrown his head back slightly, mouth wide open in a gaping laugh. 
(If Ned tried hard enough, he could practically hear Peter’s laugh echoing in his ears, fond and exasperated and too loud. He missed that laugh. He’d give anything just to hear it one more time.)
Ned didn’t remember what they’d been talking about, or why Peter had been laughing, but... God, Peter looked so carefree, liberated by joy.
(Oblivious to the fate that would befall him before the day was over.)
Before Ned could start falling to pieces over a single photo (just one out of hundreds, Jesus, thousands), his phone was snatched out of his hand. He looked to the side to come face-to-face with MJ glaring at him, shutting off his phone without a second glance. “Stop it, Leeds,” she glowered. “Don’t do this to yourself.”
Ned sniffed. “Peter loved taking pictures,” he whispered, like it was a secret. “It used to annoy me so much, how he would sometimes make us stop whatever we were doing just so he could snap a photo of us.”
(“Come on, Ned,” Peter cajoled, eyes bright with laughter. “It’ll only take a minute.”
“More like ten,” Ned grumbled, jabbing Peter’s ribcage accusingly. “I know you, Parker.”
Peter grinned sheepishly. “Please?” he tried. When Ned didn’t budge, he whined, “Look at it, Ned—it looks like it belongs in a museum! It’d be a crime to just walk past it.”
“It’s graffiti, Peter,” Ned deadpanned, unamused.
“Good graffiti,” Peter argued.
“No.”
“Just one picture, I’m begging you.”
“No!”
“...please?”)
MJ was breathing heavily. “Leeds—“
“I want to get mad at him for taking photos of me when I’m not ready again,” Ned blurted out, remembering all too well Peter’s protests of but it’s called a candid, Ned, you’re not supposed to be ready in response to Ned’s complaints.
MJ froze, her grip tightening on her book until the papers creased around her fingers.
Ned didn’t seem to notice. Now that he’d started, he couldn’t swallow down the rest: “I want to roll my eyes at him for making me stop eating just so he can photograph our food first. I want to take another stupid selfie of us in front of some random statue or other. God, MJ, I’d take anything. I just – I want him back. I want him here so I can yell at him and joke around with him and gossip about how Star Wars is better than Star Trek and be his guy in the chair. I want to make fun of his dumb science pun t-shirts—”
MJ snorted at that, the spike of amusement muting the anguish for a brief moment, her mutter of ‘you wear the same lame t-shirts, Leeds’ falling on deaf ears.
The moment passed, and MJ had to redirect her focus to keeping her tears at bay.
“I want to ask him a thousand and one questions about his crime-fighting alter-ego. I want to get mad at him for leaving footprints on my ceiling. I want to tease him about Liz. I want to build LEGOs with him. I want to have a seven-hour Star Wars movie marathon in his tiny bedroom. I want to... I want to pretend to be annoyed with him when he steals one of my sandwiches during lunch.”
Ned stopped suddenly. MJ was silently glad for the reprieve—all the memories she’d tried to hold back of Peter were flooding to the surface, and she didn’t know what would happen when they broke through.
“I just want my best friend back,” Ned said finally, brokenly. “That’s—that’s all I want, MJ.”
“Yeah,” MJ said hoarsely, wide-eyed and trembling minutely. “Yeah, me too.”
Ned squeezed his eyes shut. “Fuck,” he whispered. “Fuck. I don’t know if I can—“
He was cut off by the lights turning off suddenly. He froze, startled, and was privately relieved that he had been interrupted before he could confess that he was lost without Peter. MJ doubtlessly already knew it, but it made it feel less real, somehow, if he didn’t admit it to himself.
On the makeshift stage, Principal Morita took a few steps forward and gripped the edges of the wooden podium. “Good afternoon, students,” he greeted into the silence. Even he seemed less cheery than usual. “I’m sure you’re all wondering what’s keeping you from your last classes of the day.”
When MJ held out Ned’s phone, it took Ned more than a few seconds to realize she meant to hand it back to him. Ned pocketed it without a word, chest still heaving from the effort of his rant, eyes still stinging with the thought of Peter.
“To be honest,” Principal Morita carried on, “I had no intention of calling an assembly when I woke up this morning. But before lunch, I received a very interesting phone call.” He paused, briefly, and the smallest of smiles crept up his face. There was an uncanny excitement there that Ned hadn’t seen in what seemed like forever. 
Whatever this assembly was for, it was clearly something big.
“So it is with immense pleasure that I introduce our guest speaker today. Truthfully, I’m not quite sure myself why he’s chosen our humble school to make his first public appearance in – in weeks, but for some reason, he has.”
Ned and MJ exchanged a wary glance. Guest speaker? Public appearance? Ned mouthed at MJ, who looked just as confused until she glanced around the gym and finally realized that students and faculty members weren’t the only ones present. She gaped, stunned, and nudged Ned until he, too, followed her line of sight and spotted the crowd of reporters and cameramen gathered to one side of the gym.
“Who the hell...” MJ whispered.
The rest of her question went unspoken, but she didn’t have to wonder for long—seconds later, the principal grinned proudly and spoke into the microphone, “Without further ado, I’d like to call Tony Stark, owner of Stark Industries and Iron Man himself, to the stage.”
Ned’s jaw dropped. MJ’s book nearly fell out of her lap. And all around them, dozens of students came to life with hushed whispers that weren’t hushed at all.
Indeed, not two seconds later, Tony Stark sauntered onto the stage and met Principal Morita at the center. Principal Morita held out his hand hopefully, and Mr. Stark indulged him; Morita looked dazed the entire time they shook hands.
“Thank you for arranging this on such short notice,” Iron Man said eloquently, his charming words a jarring contrast to the solemn mood that had preceded his entry. 
The effect of Tony Stark’s presence was immediate: the cloud of misery seemed to lift from the crowd, replaced by excited chatter and awe-filled stares.
Even now, amid the fallout of the world’s end, the public loved Tony Stark.
The billionaire smoothly replaced Principal Morita behind the podium, turning to smile at the audience. His familiar sunglasses were already perched on his face, and his signature smirk ready for the cameras—the same cameras that immediately set off with endless flashes and shuttering noises as the press began taking pictures of Tony Stark for the first time since he disappeared into a spaceship weeks earlier. 
(The world hadn’t even known Tony Stark was back, Ned remembered, until Stark Industries’ CEO Pepper Potts released an official statement over a week following the Decimation. Evidently, he’d clawed his way back to Earth and landed in Wakanda, welcomed by the mourning and newly-crowned Queen Shuri.)
Mr. Stark tolerated the flashing cameras for a minute longer before he held up a single hand. Almost immediately, the audience obediently fell silent, and the cameramen stopped snapping photos of the billionaire.
The influence he held over them all was undeniable.
“Thank you,” Mr. Stark said again when everyone had complied with his non-verbal command.
Ned felt his jaw unhinge for the second time in five minutes. Now that the excess noise had died, he could hear Mr. Stark all too clearly, and he sounded... he sounded so different. In all of Mr. Stark’s extensive record of interviews, press conferences, and public appearances, Ned had never heard him this subdued.
In that moment, Tony Stark sounded just like anyone else: lost, broken, grieving.
But Ned knew, just as the rest of the world did, that Pepper Potts was alive. And so was Colonel Rhodes. Even Mr. Stark’s Head of Security, Mr. Happy (as Peter loved to call him), had survived the Decimation.
To everyone else, it would appear as if Tony Stark’s found family was still whole and complete.
Ned realized otherwise. His heart lurching to his throat, his mind flashed to Peter without his permission, to his best friend’s contagious grins and giddy laughter and uncontrollable rambling (Oh my god, Ned, you won’t believe what happened on patrol yesterday—I was caught up in this gang fight, and the men had guns and knives and everything and – and they had a dog, a dog, Ned! He was so brown and furry and cute and I just wanted to hug him, I—), and he wondered if Tony felt Peter’s loss the same way Ned did—like a gaping wound, an amputated limb, a missing heart.
And then, faster than the audience could react, Mr. Stark reached up to take off his sunglasses in one swift move, and Ned figured he must.
Because the man staring back at him was not Tony Stark. He couldn’t possibly be Tony Stark.
Tony Stark was untouchable, infallible, unmovable. Tony Stark was proud and witty and sarcastic and arrogant to a fault.
(“Peter, are you okay?” Ned asked urgently. His friend’s dazed eyes and trembling hands made him more than a little uneasy. “Is it... one of those days?” Is it a sensory overload? was what he didn’t say. He didn’t need to—they both knew it was what he meant.
Peter blinked, stuck in a haze that didn’t seem to want to let him go. “I – no,” he shook his head. “No, it’s...”
He hesitated.
Ned’d heart plummeted to his feet. How bad did it have to be, he wondered, that Peter didn’t want to tell him?
Peter told him everything.
Five minutes later, long after Ned had lost any hope of getting a real answer, Peter twisted the thick fabric of his sweater in his hands and whispered, as if he still couldn’t believe it himself, “It’s Mr. Stark.”
Ned sucked in a breath. He didn’t know Tony Stark as well as Peter did—all he knew was what Peter told him.
But Peter had always painted ‘Mr. Stark’ out to be a hero, resilient and strong-willed and indomitable.
Today, though, Peter stared at him through bleary eyes and confessed, “He’s not okay, Ned. He—he had a panic attack yesterday and I was there and I didn’t know what to do, I—“
Ned gathered Peter into his arms wordlessly, pretending he couldn’t feel the wetness that immediately soaked into his t-shirt. 
“I don’t know how to help him,” Peter gasped through a muffled sob. “He’s not—he’s not the Tony Stark the public sees. He’s not the heartless monster everyone makes him out to be.”
Ned closed his eyes and drew Peter in closer. He didn’t tell Peter it would be okay, because he didn’t know if that would be the truth.
“He’s – he’s hurting, Ned,” Peter stuttered. “He’s been hurting for a long time.”
Listening to Peter cry into his shirt, Ned felt his chest tighten with fear, and he had to ask himself:
If the heroes are all out there saving us, then who’s saving them?)
The man standing on that stage today was anything but emotionless, Ned realized. The tinted sunglasses had hidden Mr. Stark from the world before, but now, with them hanging loosely from Mr. Stark’s fingers, everyone could see the exhaustion weighing down his gaze, the tired lines framing his forehead, the red that colored his eyes with the telltale sign of grief.
Mr. Stark had never looked more vulnerable.
Naturally, because the press was full of the type of vultures MJ so often complained about, the cameramen and paparazzi impulsively began snapping photos again, rude and obtrusive. Ned expected Mr. Stark to immediately put his sunglasses (read: his shield) back on, but he didn’t.
He didn’t even seem to fully register everyone’s reactions. Instead, the expression on his face was dazed, unseeing even though his eyes were wide open.
(Ned knew the feeling. All too well.)
When the commotion finally died a second time two minutes later, Mr. Stark leaned towards the mic and started speaking, his eyes dark for a reason other than the dim lighting.
☔︎
Everything—everyone—was so loud. Tony had never hated high school more than he did then, walking up to the stage and greeting Peter’s principal with a handshake and a “thank you.”
He hated it even more when the same cameras he’d been accustomed to his whole life snapped more photos of him than they had in months. 
After he removed his sunglasses, it took the press even longer to calm down. Personally, Tony wanted to scream at them all. He felt like his world had ended, and yet all they cared about was who could take the best (or worst) photo of him to spread to everyone in the states.
It made him more than a little uncomfortable, staring into an ocean of Peter’s peers and ruthless reporters, knowing that they were all staring back at him. Knowing that they could all see him for the hollow shell of a man he was now.
He felt so exposed.
But even though every whisper felt like another dagger stabbing into the still-healing wound Thanos had carved into him, Tony couldn’t bring himself to re-armor himself with his sunglasses. He wasn’t doing this for himself, after all.
He was here for Peter. Peter, who’d admired him unquestioningly and called him his hero. Peter, who’d always been thrilled to spend time with Tony even if only in the lab, geeking out over all the newest technology. Peter, who was so smart and so kind and so selfless and – and just so much better than everyone (than him).
Peter, who deserved so much more than the ending he got. Who deserved to be seen as the hero he was. Who deserved to be remembered.
(Tony would always remember him. He didn’t think he could forget.)
Tony had been lying to the media his entire life, but Peter was worth more than another deception. Peter was worth everything, and Tony wanted nothing more than to give him exactly that.
Standing here in front of dozens of impressionable teens, preparing to pour his heart out about the boy who’d snuck into his life and into his heart, Tony knew he couldn’t pretend. He couldn’t just hide behind a pair of sunglasses and play Peter’s death off as anything less than the end of his universe.
(Thanos had thought that he was only taking 50% of the universe when he snapped his fingers, but he’d been wrong. Because Thanos had taken the entirety of his.)
It was with Peter’s selflessness in his mind that Tony took a breath and began:
“I’m sure you’ve all noticed that everywhere around the world, people began to fade three weeks ago. The Avengers and I have been calling it The Snap, but word on the street is people are referring to it as the Decimation. I suppose the Decimation is more accurate, given the sheer magnitude of all we’ve lost.”
Tony quieted for a moment, trying to ignore all the cameras pointed at him, undoubtedly recording his every word. But this wasn’t for the cameras. It wasn’t for the rest of the world.
It was for Peter, who was already dead and gone. Who’d already moved on, yet Tony couldn’t seem to do the same.
“I know you’re all looking for an explanation,” he said. “For an answer to why. But the truth is, I don’t have one for you. All I can tell you is this: three weeks ago, we fought a beast who called himself the Mad Titan. Thanos. The monster responsible for killing 50% of all life in the universe, and destroying the lives of all those who remain.”
50% of all living creatures. In the universe. 
Tony could practically feel the horror of his audience. He’d been fighting off the same horror ever since Titan.
And he knew—he knew—that everyone watching him could also hear the words he didn’t say: We lost. The Avengers failed.
It was their fault. His fault, because what nobody else knew was that Strange had given up the Time Stone, which had been instrumental to Thanos’s victory, in exchange for Tony’s life.
Tony still didn’t get why. He wasn’t worth it. He wasn’t worth more than half the universe. More than Peter.
(It should have been him.)
“In the aftermath, the rest of the world has been trying to move on, and I don’t blame you. It seems impossible, after all, to reverse a situation like this. But no matter how slim our chances, I can’t move on,” he exhaled raggedly. He paused, let his gaze fall briefly to the floor, and then straightened his posture, staring fiercely at the audience, mimicking a confidence he did not feel. “Along with the rest of the Avengers, a few warriors from across the galaxy, and Queen Shuri of Wakanda who has been generous enough to lend us her help and her lab, I’ve been trying to find a solution.”
All movement in the gym careened to a halt, shock and disbelief filling the air. Around the globe, everyone else watching Tony Stark’s speech stilled in much the same way.
A solution? they all asked themselves. Is it possible?
“And I’m not asking you to believe me,” Tony continued. “I’m not asking any of you to have faith that we will succeed. I’m not asking you all to get your hopes up if you don’t trust what I’m saying. But what I am doing is telling you that the Avengers will do whatever it takes to get back all the people we’ve lost. All the people we didn’t get to say goodbye to.”
He smiled then, grim and mirthless. 
“We call ourselves the Avengers because if we can’t save the people we love, then at the very least we’ll fight to avenge them,” he broke off, stumbling over silence for a belated moment.
The people we love. His words echoed in his mind. Love, love, love—
Peter.
He loved Peter. His kid.
“But this time, revenge isn’t enough,” Tony snapped back to himself, pulling himself together long enough to glare into the nearest camera, imagining Thanos on the other side. “I refuse to allow Thanos to take half of our people from us.”
The crowd’s murmurs grew louder.
“So I promise you all”—Tony swallowed, remembering his last promise (to Peter), remembering hitched sobs and quivering hands and shallow breaths and you’re alright, remembering that the last thing he’d ever said to Peter Parker was a lie—“the Avengers will find a way.”
The cameras went wild. The reporters did, too, jumping up into his line of sight over and over again, trying to catch his attention, roaring question upon question at him.
The students and the teachers—they were left in silence, staring at him with a worshipping kind of wonder that reminded him all too vividly of Peter. 
(Peter used to look at him like he’d hung the moon and the stars all for him. What Peter didn’t know was that if that were the case, then he was only capable of doing so because he had Peter.)
For you, Peter. “We’ll find a way,” he repeated. “We’ll get them back, however long it takes.”
He let the claim settle for a few seconds before nodding once, sharp and certain, and pointing at the first reporter. 
In the end, it only took four reporters to get to the question he’d always known was coming.
“Kelly Robinson, from the New York Bulletin. Mr. Stark, your fiancée made it clear that the press was to leave you alone following your return to Earth because you were heavily injured. Given the losses we all faced, and the personal wounds you already received, why haven’t you given up? What are you still fighting for?”
Tony’s facade of growing confidence immediately collapsed at her words, crumbling into dust the same way Peter had. How could he stay strong in the face of those questions?
What are you still fighting for? 
Steve had asked him the same thing, after he’d woken up in the med-bay to the concerned stares of the Rogue Avengers. Clint, too, had been curious, Tony had known.
After all, in their eyes, Tony hadn’t lost anyone. He still had all the people he loved—Pepper, Rhodey, Happy.
He’d walked through fire and come out on the other side unscathed.
(Except he hadn’t.)
At the time, Tony had recoiled away from the question. He’d frozen up and refused to answer, hearing his heartbeat grow louder and quicker and more panicked through the machine hooked to his heart.
And Steve and Clint both had taken one look at the tears in his eyes, the desperation with which he’d clutched his chest, and the insanity in his stare, and wisely stopped asking.
They’d realized he was determined to see this through, and it had been enough.
Tony knew the press wouldn’t be so kind.
What are you still fighting for?
He didn’t answer her question, not immediately and not directly. He knew she wouldn’t get it.
None of them would.
He needed them to understand. To see just how good a person Peter had been.
(Too good for this world.)
“My name is Tony Stark,” he said instead, “and I am Iron Man. I’m sure you’re all wondering why I need to say that—you all know who I am, after all.” Tony cracked a smile, but it was weak and the joke fell flat. No one laughed—it wasn’t funny, not anymore.
“But today, standing here in the gym of Midtown School of Science and Technology, I am not that man at all. I am not Tony Stark—Genius, Billionaire, Playboy, Philanthropist. I am not Iron Man, the superhero, the Avenger. Frankly”—his voice was bitter, venomous—“I don’t feel like a hero at all these days.”
He broke off into a chuckle that was more pained than amused.
He sought out Kelly Robinson amongst the reporters, locking eyes with her until she flinched and stepped backwards uncertainly. “Today,” he began, and though his voice was quiet, it still carried over the silence, “I am just another man who’s been hit by an unimaginable tragedy.”
Robinson’s eyes widened. Tony didn’t have to look around to know that everyone else’s did, too.
“We all—“ Tony stopped, stumbling over words and choking back his grief. “We all lost too much in the Decimation,” his voice was strangled, nothing at all like what they knew of him.
They were beginning to think they didn’t know him at all.
“Three weeks ago,” he started over, “some of you lost friends, some of you lost family. Some of you lost your mother, your father, your brothers and sisters. Three weeks ago, I—“
He breathed in a desperate gasp that didn’t seem to fill his lungs with air, feeling the ground crack and splinter beneath his feet, the air grow cold to his skin, the world start to crash around his ears.
His composure broke apart at the seams. 
“Three weeks ago,” he repeated, a whisper of loss, “I lost – I lost my kid.”
And the world stopped spinning.
Tony found Robinson’s eyes again. He pretended not to notice the ashen complexion of her face, or the regret in her eyes.
None of that mattered.
“You asked me why I still fight.” His words punched through the curtain of silence, cutting like the serrated edge of a knife. “The answer is simple.”
He smiled, lips curling to reveal teeth, a vengeful snarl. Thanos would pay.
“I fight for him. I fight for the smile on his face. I fight for movie marathons and game nights and afternoons in the lab.” He shoved his fists into his pockets, not caring that he was making the expensive fabric crease and crumple, ruining the lines of his suit. His PR managers would have a field day with that. “I fight for the day I can hold him in my arms again and tell him I love him.”
If he’d thought the crowd had been loud before, it was nothing compared to the noise they emitted now, screaming over one another to be heard. And yet despite the cacophony of sounds, it was Ned’s gasp and quiet holy shit Tony heard, his voice deafening to Tony’s ears after all the ridiculous videos Peter had shown him of he and Ned doing stupid things.
Tony found Ned easily, Peter’s best friend a familiar face to him even though they had personally only ever met once. Ned looked devastated.
Tony flinched. God, he should have approached Ned personally first, should have gotten over his own fears and told Ned the truth of what had happened.
Ned deserved better than finding out Peter had died in a speech open to the rest of the world. (It was one thing to suspect Peter had been Dusted. It was another thing entirely to have it confirmed.)
I’m sorry, Ned.
He was such a coward. He’d almost been too afraid to tell even May. It had taken him almost two weeks to remind himself she had the right to know. It was the least he‘d owed her.
He’d been terrified of her lashing out at him, even though he knew he would have deserved it. But Peter’s aunt... she was even stronger than he’d realized. 
It was no wonder Peter loved her so much, Tony had realized when he’d finally let the words he died fall from his mouth like a confession. Because May had thanked him.
Her nephew, the last of her family, had died and she had thanked him, as if he deserved anything more than her wrath—
(“Thank you for being there,” May whispered, her eyelashes thick with tears. “If it couldn’t have been me, I’m glad it was you who held him as he—“ she flinched and cut herself off. Shaking her head, she finished, “I’m sure he was glad, too.”
“No,” Tony’s voice was hoarse. “No. He begged, he begged—“
“He looked up to you.” May’s smile was a sad, lonely thing, dripping of misery and defeat. “You were his hero.”
“I couldn’t save him.”
May swallowed and looked away. In the quiet stillness of the Parker residence, Tony’s voice was quiet, small, broken. It was nothing like the confident facade of the great Tony Stark, smirk ever-present for the cameras.
May knew that this, here, was the real Tony Stark. The Tony Stark who loved her nephew, who told Peter jokes when he was upset, who bought Peter new shoes and jackets and backpacks no matter how profusely both Parkers tried to deny him, who guided Peter into the life he deserved.
“He believed in me,” Tony’s hands were shaking, violently, “he had faith in me and I failed him, God, I—“
The Tony Stark who was always trying to give parts of himself away to save the people he cared about.
“It’s not your fault,” she shook her head, even though grief and anger burned in her throat, itching to reveal themselves in a hail of thunderous words aimed at the man she’d trusted to protect her boy. She wanted to be mad, God did she want to (because if she wasn’t angry, then she would have to dwell on the despair and she didn’t think she was strong enough for that), but the look in Tony’s eyes made her stop.
He was just as devastated as she was. He lost Peter, too, she realized.
“I’m sorry,” Tony said, a stuttered gasp, and May closed her eyes.
“It’s not your fault,” she repeated, more slowly and with more conviction this time. She knew he wouldn’t believe her, but she needed to say it anyway—part of her knew she was only trying to convince herself. “You... you weren’t just a hero to him, Tony Stark. You made him into the hero he was, too. You inspired him to be brave and uphold the mantle of Spider-Man even when he felt powerless. He was strong because of you. Because you gave him purpose.”
“I didn’t deserve him,” Tony whispered, soft and sure.
May didn’t say that she doubted either of them deserved Peter.
Instead, she shuffled forward and wrapped her arms around his shoulders, drawing him close. It should have felt uncomfortable, her hugging Tony Stark, but it didn’t. Because this wasn’t really Tony Stark.
This was just Tony, someone who was grieving just as she was. 
Tony choked back a cry and let her hold him up, let her support him like he might drown without her there to keep him above water. “I miss him,” he said honestly, “so, so much.”
Tears stung at the backs of her eyelids. She ignored them. “I know,” she whispered hoarsely. “I know.”
She didn’t tell him she missed Peter, too. She didn’t have to—Tony already knew she did.)
So. May had thanked him.
She had thanked him and then she’d fixed him a cup of tea and a horrible meatloaf that had reminded him of the first time he met Peter and he’d ended up crying all over her again.
She had thanked him and then she’d pressed a framed photograph of him and Peter into his shaking hands (“That boy loved you so much,” she whispered, a wistful smile clinging to her lips the same way tears clung to her eyelashes, and Tony stared at the picture like he’d seen a ghost, a ghost with the most adorable brown curls and the happiest, happiest eyes and an innocent grin and two fingers sticking up from behind Tony’s head in an imitation of bunny ears and – and Tony couldn’t do anything but stare), pretending not to see the way Tony had to choke back a sob when she told him keep it, he would have wanted you to have it.
She had thanked him and then she’d gathered him into another hug, warm and engulfing, and whispered bring our boy back, Stark into his hair and he’d known, he’d known, he couldn’t fail her.
He couldn’t fail Peter.
And yet, when the door had swung closed between them, locking shut with a solemn click that had left Tony breathless and weak in the knees, mind struggling to wrap around the sheer finality he’d heard in that sound, Tony had collapsed against the door and realized he was already failing Peter again.
He was failing Peter by giving up. He was failing Peter by hiding away with nothing but himself, a seemingly endless supply of liquor, and his own goddamn fears to keep him company. He was failing Peter by burying his head in the sand and turning away from the world that needed heroes, especially in a time like this.
He was failing Peter by not doing everything he could to bring him back.
…Tony was tired of letting Peter down.
Happy had arrived to shepherd him away like he was a lost soul desperately in need of guidance, and Tony had let himself wallow in his grief for only the hour it took to drive back upstate before he’d picked himself up, gathered the shattered pieces of himself in his bleeding hands, and called Peter’s principal with an unprecedented request.
It was time he let Peter’s death bolster him rather than cripple him. His kid was counting on him.
☔︎
There seemed to be no end to the noise. Everyone had something to say.
It was so overwhelming that Ned couldn’t, in fact, hear a word of it. He doubted anybody else could, either.
In the wake of Tony Stark’s—he’s Iron Man, Peter, Iron Man!—admission, it felt as though everyone in the entire gym (and perhaps everyone in the entire country) had been sent to their feet, gasping and exclaiming excitedly to their friends and bellowing questions of disbelief.
Ned and MJ were the only ones whispering.
“Holy crap,” MJ said eloquently, having given up on her usually robotic composure after Tony Stark first took off his sunglasses. “Well shit.”
“You don’t think...?” Ned trailed off.
MJ’s eyes were blown so wide open it would have been comical if Ned wasn’t sure the size of his own eyes rivalled hers. “Peter?” she asked, needlessly.
They exchanged a look. They were both thinking the same thing: Who else could it be?
“Oh, my god,” Ned breathed. “Oh, my god.”
“Peter fucking Parker,” MJ muttered. “Damn. Of course Peter is the one person who can make Anthony Edward Stark admit he loves him in front of the whole world.”
MJ laughed, then, sharp and loud, drenched in torment. Ned watched, concerned, as her chuckles grew less amused and more hysterical, her eyes tearing up despite herself.
“Of-fucking-course.”
“MJ—”
“It should make me feel better,” she cut him off before he could say anything more—not that he even knew what he’d been about to say, “knowing that so many people cared about Peter. Knowing that we aren’t the only ones who miss him. Knowing that even Peter’s hero is grieving for him.”
It should, MJ had said. Should. 
(‘Should’ applied to a lot of things.
Peter should be alive.
Ned should be able to hug his best friend after school.
Queens should still have its favorite web-slinging vigilante out keeping the streets safe at night.
But none of those things were true.)
“It should make me feel better,” MJ repeated, tonelessly. The hysteria in her voice had died, but remnants of it remained in her eyes, opaque and unnoticeable. 
Ned noticed.
“But it doesn’t,” she said. “It just makes it all harder.”
Ned didn’t reply. He didn’t have to for MJ to know he agreed.
“Peter’s still dead,” MJ whispered.
Those three words made up the saddest sentence Ned had ever heard. He immediately wished he would never have to hear it again, but even then, even as he recoiled away from MJ as if struck, he knew he would—in his nightmares, in his daydreams, in the recesses of his mind where the voices refused to shut up.
Peter’s still dead.
Peter’s still dead.
Peter’s still fucking dead.
Ned wanted to scream at MJ—at everyone—to leave him alone. Instead he swallowed down the urge, felt it go down his throat like shards of glass, and turned back to the stage. “I want to hear what else he has to say,” was all Ned said.
MJ said nothing. After all, what else was there to say?
(Nothing. There were no words at all, not for this.)
Ned drew his knees up to his chest and wished he was seven and innocent again, giggling with Peter over his new Star Wars figurines under the green-tinted lights of the glow-in-the-dark star cutouts decorating his ceiling.
(He wished the stars would shine again for him.
But the stars had long vanished, and with them, so had their light.)
All there was left for Ned to do was tune back into Iron Man’s speech and act like he cared at all about the reporters and their burning questions, when all he wanted to do was take Tony Stark aside and demand, Is it true? Are you going to bring them all back? Are you going to bring Peter back?
For a moment, Ned could have sworn Mr. Stark’s eyes locked with his, and his breath caught in his throat. He wondered if, even from all the way over there on the stage, the scientist could hear his thoughts.
Could hear his prayers. 
Then Mr. Stark flinched minutely and took a step back, hurriedly averting his eyes, and Ned exhaled heavily.
Come on, Mr. Stark, he thought, pleaded, begged, you’ve always been Peter’s favorite. You’ve been saving him from day one, from even before you knew who he was. You rescued him at the Stark Expo, you rescued him constantly when he was getting himself into world after world of trouble as Spider-Man—you rescued him all the time.
Be his hero again. Please. Just save him one more time.
Mr. Stark cleared his throat up on the stage, shook off whatever stupor had seized him, and quickly pointed at another reporter.
Please.
“Josh Anderson, CNN News. Mr. Stark, you claim that you and the Avengers will give us back the people we’ve lost. But what about right now? What do you plan to do to help those that remain, those who’ve lost their families, their jobs, their financial security, their motivation? What will you do for everyone who is struggling to come to terms with the Decimation?”
Please.
“Thank you, Josh from CNN News, that’s an excellent question,” Stark responded. The raw anguish had been pushed back, replaced by the steely fierceness Ned had always associated with the Great Tony Stark. Yet even still, there remained traces of the other Tony in the newly-appeared smattering of salt and pepper in his hair, in the way he rocked unsteadily back and forth on his heels, and in the haunted look in his eyes.
It was barely there, but it still existed. 
“To answer your concerns, Pepper Potts and I, on behalf of Stark Industries, wish to reassure you all that you are not alone.” There was a softness to Tony’s voice, a certain wrecked quality that made Ned think it was Tony who needed to be told he was not alone. “We are here to help. To prove this, we’d first like to offer a solution for those who are suffering financially due to the Decimation.”
Please.
“Thus, as the Avengers continue to fight for all of your loved ones, it is with great pride and joy that I announce to you all the inauguration of the Peter Parker Foundation, after – after my kid.” Tony had said pride, he had said joy, but though there was indeed a modicum of relief in his expression, it was greatly outweighed by the sheer heartbreak.
Please. 
The breath whooshed out of Ned in a speedy exhale. Beside him, MJ really did drop her book this time.
“Whoa,” Ned mumbled quietly. Three weeks ago, he would have laughed excitedly, cheered, and hugged Peter as he confidently proclaimed this to be the greatest day of his life. 
(Three weeks ago, Peter had been alive.)
“‘Whoa’ is right,” MJ agreed, just as dully. She looked surprised, but not amazed. “That’s—wow. Peter… Peter would have been beyond thrilled.” And MJ was right. Peter would have been ecstatic. He would have stared at Mr. Stark in awe and cried, probably, upon realizing just how important he was to a man he’d looked up to his entire life.
Ned couldn’t find it in himself to be anywhere near ‘ecstatic.’
Meanwhile, all around him, there were whispers everywhere. Of course there were; Peter’s classmates hadn’t even believed that Peter had been an intern at Stark Industries, much less Tony Stark’s ‘kid’, apparently.
If Ned possessed the energy to feel anything but overwhelming and all-encompassing devastation, he would have probably been delighted to finally have it proven that Peter really had known Iron Man. 
But as it were, he couldn’t even bring himself to seek out Flash in the audience and revel in the doubtlessly shocked, deer-caught-in-headlights look that he could vaguely imagine on Flash’s face. 
What did it matter that they’d finally vindicated themselves when Peter wasn’t here to celebrate with?
Below on the stage, seemingly unaware of (or, more likely, completely aware of but indifferent to) the chain reaction he had set off, Tony continued to elaborate on how the Peter Parker Foundation would be aimed at helping any and all people with everything from providing their kids with an education to paying for funeral costs. He explained it all with an ease that spoke of his experience, but a stiltedness that betrayed his discomfort. 
Ned didn’t care. He tried to listen, tried to pay attention, but he couldn’t seem to focus on anything but the roaring in his ears, the stampede in his chest, the shrieking in his skull, the rattle of his bones. 
He couldn’t hear a word Tony said.
☔︎
Flash was not afraid to admit that he admired Iron Man. In fact, he had admired Iron Man since the hero first revealed himself in a dramatic moment worthy only of Tony Stark.
He admired Tony Stark, too.
But that didn’t mean he was blind to the genius’s faults—because he wasn’t. He knew who the Avenger was; he knew that, for all his greatness, one of Tony Stark’s most prominent flaws was that he was utterly incapable of processing his own emotions.
Hell, the entire nation knew that. Tony Stark’s emotional shortcomings had been documented since before Flash had even really known who Tony Stark was besides the fact that he shared the name of Stark Industries.
And yet.
And yet…
Flash found himself gawking at Tony Stark, whose presence was currently gracing their humble school. He didn’t think even the announcement that the billionaire CEO of Stark Industries was Iron Man had shocked him this much.
…It is with great pride and joy that I announce to you all the inauguration of the Peter Parker foundation. 
…with great pride and joy that I announce to you all the inauguration of the Peter Parker foundation. 
…and joy that I announce to you all the inauguration of the Peter Parker foundation. 
…I announce to you all the inauguration of the Peter Parker foundation. 
…inauguration of the Peter Parker foundation.
...the Peter Parker foundation.
...Peter Parker foundation.
…Parker.
Holy shit.
Parker. Peter fucking Parker.
Flash whimpered. (He would never admit it to anyone else, but yes, he whimpered.) He couldn’t believe he’d been bullying Iron Man’s kid. 
He wasn’t given the chance to wallow in his self-pity, however, because Tony quickly continued to speak, changing the subject to all the other ways he and Stark Industries planned to help the world heal.
But even as he spoke of rebuilding efforts and pardons for the previously-Rogue Avengers and alliances between governments, Flash could tell that everyone remained hooked only on the news that Tony Stark had a kid.
And Flash looked at Mr. Stark, and he saw a sadness in his smile—the same sadness he saw every morning when his mother came into his room just to make sure he was still there and whole—that made Flash’s chest tighten.
Peter Parker did that. Parker put that look on Iron Man’s face.
It was all too clear that Mr. Stark genuinely cared about Flash’s classmate. Peter must be something, Flash mused, to make Tony fucking Stark, genius, billionaire, philanthropist, give a damn. 
And what did it say about Flash, then, if he was capable of hurting someone so undeniably good that even Mr. Stark could see it?
☔︎
Fifteen minutes later, the reporters were still unsatisfied, each of them putting their hands up over and over again, clamoring for his attention even if they’d already had their chance to ask a question just moments before.
Tony was exhausted.
All they see you as is ‘Tony Stark’s kid’, Tony thought regretfully. That’s my fault. You’re... you’re – so much more. 
You’re everything, Pete.
“That’s enough,” Tony snapped, corralling his misery back into its cage. He was sick of standing here and regaling the world with stories of how great Peter had been when none of these people had even known his kid. Peter was beyond all of them—none of them, especially not him, deserved Peter Parker (or Spider-Man).
Peter Parker and Spider-Man were one and the same, but Tony knew better than anyone that Peter didn’t see it that way. Peter had been so unaware of his value that Tony found it inconceivable.
How was it that the best person he knew hadn’t even been able to see his own worth?
(“I don’t get it,” Tony said, frustrated. “You could knock your bully out in a single punch. Why don’t you?”
“Because I’m Peter Parker!” Peter answered heatedly. “Because when I’m at school, I’m not Spider-Man. I can’t fight back because I’m supposed to be a weak nobody.”
“You are not a nobody. Don’t you dare say that about yourself again,” Tony hissed. His gut churned to hear Peter put himself so down. “Suit or no suit, you’re still Spider-Man.”
Peter was so good. Why couldn’t he accept that?
But Peter just shook his head stubbornly, a hint of sadness in his gaze. “No, I’m not. Spider-Man is strong, brave, invincible. I’m nowhere near any of that. When I put on that mask... I’m a different person. The thing is, Mr. Stark, Spider-Man possesses a greatness Peter Parker cannot even hope to touch.”
Tony wanted to throw up. God, his kid. His precious, precious kid who he loved so much. He wished he could just hold Peter tight and make Peter see himself the way Tony saw him:
Selfless, kind, intelligent. Powerful beyond measure yet compassionate to the extreme.
Perfect.)
(“Holy crap,” Tony breathed, staring wide-eyed at the finished equation scribbled on his whiteboard. He knew without a doubt that he hadn’t yet had a chance to fix that equation.
He also knew who that handwriting belonged to.
He spun around in his chair and pointed accusingly at Peter. “Peter Parker, you are a genius,” he praised, grinning widely when the boy’s head jerked upwards and Peter was left blinking at him, confused. 
“What – what did I d–do?” Peter stammered.
Tony’s grin broadened. “You solved my equation is what you did, you little prodigy,” he teased. “Honestly, Pete, I’ve been racking my brain trying to figure that out for days now, and you’ve been here for, what, two hours maybe? That formula is way beyond high school maths.”
Peter’s cheeks pinked. It was adorable—Tony almost cooed at the sight. He didn’t, of course—he wasn’t a blubbering toddler or a gushing grandmother—but it was a tempting urge. “I – I don’t... I don’t know,”—Peter was fumbling to find words, looking anywhere but at Tony—“I was just playing around with the numbers and I thought I recognized something. I’m – sorry...?”
Tony rolled his eyes. “Don’t apologize, I’m complimenting you. You did good, Pete.” His eyes twinkled proudly. “You’ve been holding out on me, haven’t you, you little rascal?”
“That – that’s not...” Peter shook his head, and the twin roses on his face abruptly faded as his expression morphed from embarrassed to disheartened. “You’re wrong, Mr. Stark. I’m not that smart.”
Tony frowned immediately. If it were anyone else, he would have dismissed the words as teenage angst, but there was something about the look on Peter’s face that didn’t sit right with him. 
“No, you’re not,” Tony agreed, and watched as Peter flinched visibly and blinked his eyes rapidly like he was trying not to cry. A little smile crept up Tony’s face as he finished, more sincerely than he’d intended, “You’re smarter.”
Peter’s eyes widened again. This time, the tears that formed were less dejected and more grateful.
Still, his stubbornness persisted. “But Mr. Stark, I—”
“No buts, Pete,” Tony said gently. “You’re a genius, kid. Trust me, I know what I’m talking about. You – God, Pete, you’re smarter than I could have ever hoped to be at your age. And I know you’ll be even smarter when you grow older.”
Peter sniffled and looked away, less out of shyness and more out of disbelief. Tony hated that disbelief.
Peter should know how amazing he was.
“And you know what?” Tony carried on. “I can’t wait until you surpass everyone else in the field, including me. I just know you’ll impress them all—you’ve already impressed me.”
“You’re – you’re lying,” Peter protested, but his voice was weak. Peter wanted nothing more than to be able to believe Tony was telling the truth, but how could he? He was just a nerdy kid from Queens. “That has to be an exaggeration, or—”
“It’s not,” Tony said firmly, so sure and full of conviction that Peter faltered. “I would never lie to you, not about this. Peter, I’m so proud of you.”
Peter brought his wrists to his eyes and wiped hastily, turning bodily away from Tony.
Tony pretended he couldn’t see Peter break down in the corner of his lab. He pretended it didn’t break his heart to think that Peter genuinely believed himself to be worth so much less than what he was really worth.)
(“Well, don’t you look down today,” Tony joked when Peter walked into his lab like someone had killed his puppy.
Except Peter didn’t laugh. He smiled pathetically, an obvious farce that even a toddler would be able to see through, but he didn’t laugh.
“Hey,” Tony frowned. “What happened? Who do I need to beat up?”
Peter rolled his eyes. “No one,” he muttered, the frown never leaving his face.
“Peter,” Tony sighed, “seriously. I can’t do anything if you don’t tell me what’s wrong. So please, tell me. I want to help you.”
Peter shook his head. The phony smile on his face grew wider, as if that would distract Tony from noticing the lack of luster behind it. “It’s really nothing,” he lied. “Don’t worry about it, Mr. Stark.”
Tony worried. He let it go, and he didn’t prod any further, but that didn’t stop him from worrying. 
He kept a close eye on Peter as Peter manouvered around the lab as if he belonged there, bringing a smile to Tony’s lips for a fleeting moment before he remembered something was wrong. 
All throughout the hours Peter spent working in the lab, Tony watched him, waiting for him to slip up and give Tony something to work with.
But Peter never did. He looked at Tony over his shoulder once every few minutes, chewing his lip intently, but he didn’t say a word. 
In the end, Tony was forced to let Peter go back home, eyes still dull and joy still muted. Usually, Peter would skip out of the lab with a bounce in his step, not even trying to hide how happy he was, but this time, Tony’s brows knitted when he saw how Peter seemed to be hunching in on himself as he walked, his legs practically dragging behind him.
It only reinforced the thought in Tony’s mind: Peter was upset.
Tony stressed over the question of what exactly Peter was unhappy about for hours until he finally received a text from May, instantly cluing him in on the situation.
Aunt Hottie: Hey, Tony. I need a favor.
Aunt Hottie: I’m sorry to ask you this, but Midtown offers an out-of-states field trip to its students every year. Peter was really looking forward to go and have some fun with his friends, but I’m not sure that’s possible anymore.
Aunt Hottie: I really wish I could let Peter go, but it’s just that the trip is so expensive and we’ve been struggling lately. 
Aunt Hottie: You know I hate to accept charity, but I was wondering if you could help us out, just this once. I know it would make Peter’s day.
Tony stared at his phone screen, his chest stuttering in his ribcage for a moment. His eyes skipped over May’s text messages a second time, and he knew how to read between the lines—May didn’t just want Peter to enjoy a trip with his friends; she wanted him to enjoy himself and just be a teenager for once, a kid instead of a hero shouldering the weight of the world.
“Oh, kid,” Tony whispered to himself, feeling his heart shatter. God, Peter was too fucking selfless. 
Tony closed his eyes. “Peter, goddamnit, I’m a billionaire,” he sighed, thinking of all the times Peter had glanced uncertainly at him during their lab session. “And funding your field trip is probably the best and most worthwhile thing I could possibly spend my money on.”
Didn’t Peter know that Tony would bend over backwards to make him happy?
He shook his head and started to type out his response, fingers flying furiously across the keyboard. If he focused on the menial task hard enough, he could even ignore the few tears that had gathered in his eyes. It physically hurt to know that Peter was too afraid to accept his help even when Tony was so desperate to give it to him.
Helicopter Mentor: Of course I’ll pay for Peter’s trip, May. You don’t even have to ask.
Helicopter Mentor: You know I’m more than happy to lend you guys a hand anytime. And trust me, it’s not charity. I don’t pity you. I know you want to provide for Peter, but I have the money, and Peter’s worth it.
Helicopter Mentor: Why didn’t Peter ask me when he was over at the lab?
He didn’t have to wait long for a reply.
Aunt Hottie: Thank you, Tony. 
Aunt Hottie: I know it’s not a handout, Tony, but can you blame me for being proud?
Aunt Hottie: You and I both know Peter. He feels bad. He doesn’t want to be a burden, or feel like he’s using you for your money.
Tony’s frown deepened. He rushed to deny Peter’s assumptions, the tears finally spilling over.
Helicopter Mentor: Peter could NEVER be a burden.
Helicopter Mentor: And I know he wouldn’t deliberately use me, May. Peter’s a good kid. He deserves the world.
And Tony had every intention of giving Peter exactly that.)
No, these people had no idea who his kid was.
They didn’t know anything about Peter. They didn’t know that Peter had laughed at every little thing, heart full and happy and unburdened by hatred. They didn’t know that Peter used to constantly wow Tony with his brain—Peter could catch one glimpse of a complex problem that confused even Tony and immediately spit out a thousand and one ideas of how to solve it. They didn’t know Peter had a nervous tick; whenever he was self-conscious or flustered or anxious, he wouldn’t be able to help but stammer out every second word. They didn’t know Peter had a moral compass stronger than Captain America; they didn’t know Peter would have gladly risked his own life if it meant saving even one other person.
They didn’t know that Peter’s favorite color had been red, after the Iron Man suit, or that Peter had made Tony cry when he’d admitted that his favorite hero was the man behind the mask, Tony Stark. They didn’t know Peter had defended Star Wars to the very end. They didn’t know Peter had cried every time they watched Coco, even though he knew the movie by heart by now. They didn’t know Peter had been so well-versed in gamma radiation and nuclear physics that even Bruce Banner would have been stunned. 
They didn’t know that Peter’s favorite ice cream flavor had been Hunka Hulka Burning Fudge, but that he had always eaten Stark Raving Hazelnuts anyway to make Tony feel better. They didn’t know that Peter used to love eating pancakes with gummy bears mixed into the batter—much to Tony’s unending disgust. They didn’t know that Peter would turn into a squealing seven-year-old at the slightest mention of Thor, God of Thunder (and no, Tony was not jealous, thank you very much).
They didn’t know Peter had loved his friends dearly. They didn’t know that Peter would have never bailed on even a simple movie night with Ned, even if it was Tony Stark himself asking him to. They didn’t know that Peter had catalogued all of MJ’s favorite genres and authors just so he could surprise her with a new book every so often and make her smile. They didn’t know that Peter would have moved heaven and earth for Ned and MJ. 
They didn’t know that Peter had swung his way into Tony’s heart and refused to leave. They didn’t know that Peter’s innocence and childish glee had effortlessly gotten Tony wrapped around his finger. They didn’t know that Peter had showed up on Tony’s doorstep with a sheepish grin and a clumsily-wrapped present on Father’s Day (or that, for the first time in his entire life, Tony had finally experienced a Father’s Day he could look back at with a smile). They didn’t know that Peter had warmed up the cold rooms of Stark Tower without even trying. They didn’t know that the first time Peter had stumbled upon Tony panting on the floor, in the throes of a panic attack, Peter hadn’t shied away; Peter had stayed by Tony’s side unhesitatingly, murmuring words of love and comfort to the wounded man. They didn’t know that Peter had patched up Tony’s heart and trust after Steve Rogers had broken both with his betrayal.
They didn’t know that Peter’s first priority had always been his aunt—they didn’t know that Peter was always thinking up new ways to earn money just so he could ease the financial strain May struggled with. They didn’t know that Peter gave before he took. They didn’t know that Peter used to cry himself to sleep at night imagining all the people he hadn’t been able to save—and all the people he hadn’t even known needed saving. They didn’t know that Peter had always put everyone else before himself.
They didn’t know that Peter had made Tony’s life so much better, or that Tony was flailing without him now. They didn’t know that the Peter-shaped hole in the universe had made the lights in Tony’s life go out.
They didn’t know that Tony felt so incomplete, so broken and empty, without Peter. They didn’t know that Tony would still miss Peter long after the world had forgotten all about Spider-Man. 
They didn’t know that Tony had loved, and would always love, Peter as if he were his own son.
They didn’t know that in the seventeen years he’d been alive, Peter had touched the hearts of so many—Tony, May, Ned, MJ, even Happy and Pepper and Rhodey.
They didn’t know shit about Peter Parker.
“That’s enough,” Tony echoed his earlier words, loud enough to punch into the ears of everyone present. The racket slowly died down. Tony breathed a sigh of relief. “I’ll be taking only one more question.”
Instantly the hands were back up, desperation rushing through the reporters.
Tony scanned the group slowly, and his eyes subconsciously hooked on one of the younger reporters, a man with unkempt brown hair and an eagerness that had already left his more senior peers. He was wearing a checkered shirt and a sweater that reminded Tony of Peter more than he’d like to admit.
Tony’s throat dried.
Pete.
Tony couldn’t escape him. (He didn’t want to. He’d give away all of his fortune and fame if it meant getting Peter back.)
“You, with the red sweater”—Peter preferred blue—“and square glasses.” He couldn’t help himself. He’d always been fantastic at self-sabotage.
The man blanched. It was easy to see that he hadn’t expected to be chosen—Tony could figure why: he was on the young side, and obviously inexperienced.
But so was Peter, Tony thought, and he was smarter than even the best and most accomplished of my highest-paid scientists. 
Tony watched as the young reporter recovered his composure admirably, a practiced smile falling onto his lips as he asked, much more smoothly and charmingly than Peter would have, “James Hall from The Post, sir. Who was Peter Parker to you? What exactly do you mean when you say he was your kid?”
James Hall was not Peter. Peter was awkward and a stammering mess and endearingly terrible at social situations. James Hall, on the other hand, was mustering a confidence that Peter would never have been able to fake.
It brought him both unexplainable relief and despair to recognize that this reporter, who resembled Peter only in his brown hair (Tony had loved Peter’s hair, had loved running his hand through those untamable curls) and nerdy clothes, was completely different in the ways that mattered (it mattered because Tony had adored Peter’s shy stammer more than Peter had ever known).
Tony couldn’t see Peter in Hall anymore. His kid was gone.
But the reporter’s question nevertheless made Tony’s breath still in his lungs in a way only Peter’s questions ever had before—Why won’t you let me fight with you? Why did you give me back the suit if you don’t want me to be a hero? Why don’t you care?
(He cared. God, he cared too much.)
He was my son, were the words that impulsively formed on his tongue, begging to be let out. The need to shout the claim from the rooftops burned bright inside him.
He had already opened his mouth, ready to let those four words chase out of his chest, when he realized that they were a lie. 
Peter hadn’t been his son. In fact, May—who’d raised and loved Peter for far longer than Tony had even known him, who had more of a claim to Peter than Tony ever would, who’d lost everything in Peter—was probably watching this impromptu ‘press conference’ right now from the safety of the Parker apartment.
Tony had entertained the idea that Peter was his for so long that he’d almost had himself convinced of the idea. Ever since Toomes, and ever since Tony had taken a shine to Peter and his incredible mind, Tony had discovered it was impossible to keep Peter out. As the weeks and months had flown by, he had caught himself staring at Peter more and more often, trailing his eyes over Peter’s curly brown hair and doe brown eyes and cheeky smile and thinking, fuck, I wish he was my son.
But Peter had never been his.
“He – he was my intern,” Tony finally answered, unable to fight off the wobble in his voice, the falter in his words, the shudder in his breath. “Peter was the youngest intern Stark Industries has ever had. Despite his youth, however, his application immediately stood out to us—his ideas were brilliant, full of the kind of revolutionary genius that evades men twice his age. It seemed like the only option available to us was to make an exception for him. So we did, and Peter continued to prove himself, time and again, until eventually I took him on as my personal intern.”
The cover story dripped from his lips like honey. Tony had never wanted to lie about Peter, but he knew Peter would never have agreed to revealing his identity so soon.
But there was one truth he could admit to. “Over time, I saw him as less of an employee and more of a son. I mean, who could blame me? Peter was undoubtedly one of the smartest people I’ve ever met, and believe me, I’ve met a lot of smart people. Hell, I’ve met me. Plus, I’m sure everyone here is more than well aware of my eccentric nature—pseudo-adopting a teenager with an ingenuity to put my own to shame is far from the weirdest thing the press has reported me doing.”
It was the most honest he’d ever remembered being.
He paused. “So when I call him ‘my kid,’ it’s not because he’s biologically mine. We’re not related in any way—though I’m not ashamed to admit I wish we were. Peter was, well – I guess you could liken him to a leech who stuck to me and refused to let go, though I promise you he’d detest the comparison.”
He grinned, mischievously, but the amused laughs that ran through the audience did nothing but make him all the more aware of the one laugh he couldn’t hear.
I wish I hadn’t told you off for being so loud so often, because right now there’s nothing I wouldn’t do to hear that laugh just one more time.
God, he missed Peter.
☔︎
After he’d answered his last question, Mr. Stark walked away from the audience to the sound of their continued yells. Principal Morita had barely returned to the stage to dismiss all of the students before Ned was leaping off his seat and rushing down the aisle.
“Ned!” MJ’s voice halted him in his tracks, her fingers wrapping around his arm. “Where are you going?”
“He knew Peter was dead,” Ned hissed. “He knew, but still he left us hanging for weeks on end, forced to accept the fact that Peter’s gone and we never even got to say goodbye. We didn’t even know if Peter had – had vanished in the Decimation or if something else had killed him. We didn’t know.”
“Ned…” MJ sounded devastated.
“And he just left us in the dark, MJ. He has the nerve to tell the whole world about Peter Parker before telling us, his friends.” Ned shook his head furiously, tears falling onto his t-shirt, distorting the words I Make Horrible Science Puns But Only Periodically even more than he already had by crumpling the fabric in his fists, desperate to ground himself (the shirt had been Peter’s, dubbed one of his favorite ‘comfort shirts’ thanks to its large size; Aunt May had given it to Ned four days after the Decimation when she’d found him curled into a ball on the floor of Peter’s bedroom). “Didn’t we deserve to know? Didn’t we have the right to know?”
“Ned, please.” MJ’s voice quaked, her chest convulsing. She stared at him with wide, skittish eyes like she was afraid he was in danger of exploding at any moment. ��St–stop.”
Ned didn’t stop. “I’ve been asking myself what happened to Peter for three weeks. Three weeks. I couldn’t shake the thought that maybe he didn’t fade in the Decimation. Maybe he was killed in battle—by Thanos, apparently. I kept remembering that moment on the bus when Peter asked me to cause a distraction and the first thing that popped into my mind was we’re all going to die. And everyday, I wonder, why did I have to say that? Why did the last thing Peter heard me say have to be that?”
Ned was inconsolable. 
MJ, listening to Ned’s outpouring of grief and anger and guilt, felt much the same way. It was as if Ned’s words had collapsed her chest in on her heart, crushing her.
She couldn’t breathe. She opened her mouth, not knowing if it was to agree with him or reassure him or beg him to shut up shut up please shut up, but no words escaped her.
Ned shook his head, tore away from MJ, and rushed after the disappearing form of Tony Stark. He was vaguely aware of her pinching herself out of her stupor and calling after him, but he ignored her, his focus tunneling in on Mr. Stark.
He found the Avenger marching down the hallways in front of the auditorium, flanked by two large, imposing men.
Ned ground his teeth together. For a split-second, he saw Peter dance into his vision, eyes pleading and teary, begging him to leave Mr. Stark alone. Begging him to see that Mr. Stark was suffering, too.
And Ned knew. Ned knew Mr. Stark was suffering—there was no denying that, not when he had been able to see all the evidence of it just minutes before on the stage.
But Ned had also been suffering. He’d been miserable for every second of the last three weeks.
(“Do you still hear him?” MJ whispered one afternoon, when they were sitting in silence in the library, side-by-side but separate.
Ned felt like drowning.
“Because I – I do,” she answered herself a second later. “I can’t help it. He’s everywhere. He’s here now.”
Ned knew what that felt like.
“Y–yeah,” Ned whispered. “So do I. I hear him all the time.”)
“Stark!” he shouted. The students who were lingering in the hall started, turning to him with wide, horrified eyes, as if scandalized by his impertinent use of Iron Man’s last name. The old Ned would have been just as appalled by his abject disrespect towards one of his childhood heroes, but that Ned had died with Peter. 
The two men guarding Tony whirled around in a flash, a glare on one of them and a tired look on the other. The angry one immediately lifted a hand to the bulge in his suit jacket, chest shoving forward like he wanted to lash out and barrel towards a high school student.
Ned wouldn’t have cared. Peter had been his best friend, and now he was gone.
Nothing else seemed to matter.
But the other man faltered, and lifted a hand to stop his colleague. Ned recognized him as Happy, who had picked Peter up after school everyday without fail, who used to buy Peter and Ned ice cream if he saw them celebrating their test results, who’d honked rudely at Flash and then ‘gently’ nudged the bully with his car when he overheard Flash mocking Peter.
“Ted,” Happy said.
Ned didn’t care about that, either. Peter wasn’t here to roll his eyes at Happy and pout, Happy, I know you know his name is actually Ned. You’re not fooling anyone.
Ned nodded at Happy, unable to so much as smile. “Mr. Happy,” he greeted, and suppressed a flinch when he couldn’t help but remember all the times he and Peter had laughed at Happy’s obvious distaste for his nickname.
Who would he laugh over stupid things with now?
“I need to speak with Mr. Stark,” Ned insisted.
Before Happy could protest, Tony pushed forward and offered Ned a single nod that spoke a thousand words. His sunglasses were still off his face, and Ned could see the entire array of emotions that crossed his eyes.
“Well, I’m right here,” Tony said, too numbly to be the man who’d played Mario Kart with Peter at 1 A.M., thrilling Peter so much he’d jabbered endlessly about it to Ned the next day. “Speak away.”
Speak away. 
There were so many things Ned wanted to say.
Why didn’t you tell me?
Why did you let me wonder what had happened to Peter for so long?
Did you know that the last thing I ever said to him was “we’re all going to die”?
Why didn’t you save him?
You were supposed to save him.
But all of the words died in his throat.
Instead, when he opened his mouth, what came out was a plea—“Promise me you’re going to bring my best friend back.”
Tony didn’t blink. He didn’t falter, he didn’t flinch, he didn’t hesitate. “I’m going to bring all of them back.”
It should have reassured Ned.
But he’d been through too many days without Peter to take even Iron Man himself at his word. He didn’t trust many things anymore.
“Don’t you dare lie to me,” Ned forced out through gritted teeth. “Not about this.” Not about Peter.
This time, Tony did flinch. “Like I said,” he said finally, “I’ll do whatever it takes. I – I swear.” Tony tore his eyes away and cursed, rubbing his face tiredly, his breath tripping over itself. “I’m bringing Peter home if it’s the last thing I do.”
Ned had no idea what to say to that.
Luckily, MJ responded for him, having caught up to him by now, “You better.” She paused. “Though try to make it out alive. Peter will have both our heads if he knew we let you sacrifice yourself for him.”
“I’d do it, you know,” Tony interjected, half-desperate and half-determined. “If it comes to it. Peter – Peter’s life is worth more than mine.”
MJ gave him a long, searching look. “I know,” she said at last. “But I meant what I said. Peter would want to come home to you, too.”
This time, it was MJ who left Tony speechless instead of the other way around. He stared at her like he didn’t quite know what to do with that information. 
“That’s – I – he—“
“She’s right,” Ned said quietly when it was clear Tony was too shaken to speak coherently. “You have to stay alive. For Peter.”
Their gazes met again. In Tony’s eyes, Ned saw a plea, an apology, a denial. He saw please I miss Peter too and I want him back and I’m sorry and Peter deserves better than me and so long as Peter comes home at all, I don’t care what I have to do and I’m sorry, I’m so sorry.
For the first time, Ned felt like he could empathize with someone like Tony Stark, so seemingly untouchable from a distance. He glanced sidelong at MJ, and imagined that she might be thinking the same thing, if only she let herself feel these days.
(Ned didn’t get it. He was completely incapable of even trying to hide away from his grief—he felt Peter and Peter’s absence wherever he went, like a second skin he could not shed—but MJ seemed to be the opposite. Whereas he was stuck suffocating in his sadness, unable to leave, she had mostly detached herself from it, able to survive only because she had pushed it all away.
Ned thought he would die if he let Peter go. Even now, he didn’t want to.
Peter had been his best friend. That would never change.)
Then Tony swallowed and shoved his sunglasses back on, fingers shaking around the frame, and Ned was left to face his grief alone once more.
☔︎
It took Tony’s bodyguards over twenty minutes to fight off the stragglers and carve Tony a path to the carpark through the crowd. When Tony finally reached his car, Happy held open the back door for him, and then, instead of climbing into the passenger seat, slid in after Tony while Jim started the car.
Happy waited until they were already in motion, the sound of the engine constant and reassuring, to speak up: “Thank you.”
Tony froze. He could barely hear Happy, quiet as the bodyguard was being, over the vibrations of the car, but there was no mistaking Happy’s words.
“Hap,” his voice cracked, “don’t – don’t thank me. Please. I didn’t—”
“Thank you,” Happy repeated. “You know we don’t blame you, Tony. And – it’s nice to finally see Peter get the recognition he deserves as himself, too, not just as Spider-Man.”
(Spider-Man was great, yes, but Peter Parker was braver, stronger, better—
Even if he couldn’t be heralded for it right now, Peter Parker was the real hero.)
Tony didn’t know what to say. He hadn’t done what he did to be thanked. He’d just... he’d just wanted to celebrate Peter. To honor his kid.
Happy exhaled slowly. “It doesn’t make things better, not by a long shot. It doesn’t bring Peter back. But... it’s easier, somehow, knowing we’re not the only ones who see that kid for his true potential anymore. Peter deserved to know he was appreciated. I regret not telling him that more often. I wonder if he even knew – if he knew I cared.”
Tony’s eyes burned. God, but he hadn’t even remembered that Happy had loved Peter, too—that, sometimes, when Happy was so exhausted of the other aspects of his job, it was only Peter’s text messages and long rambling voicemails that could get him to smile.
And he hadn’t even realized. He’d been so consumed by his own grief that he hadn’t been able to see that Happy had been missing Peter, too; that even though he was a terrible substitute for Peter and all his goodness, Happy had needed him. 
Happy had needed him to admit to how much he cared about Peter, too, and Tony hadn’t been able to get his head out of his ass long enough to see that.
Christ, how selfish have I been that I’ve holed myself up in my room, as if I’m the only one allowed to grieve Peter? I don’t own exclusive rights to his absence.
There are others whose lives have been irreparably damaged by Peter’s loss, too. Just take a look at Happy, you asshole. He never admitted it to Pete’s face, but you saw the change in him: you saw the way he smiled whenever the hour-hand on a clock drew nearer and nearer to 3:00 P.M. on a weekday; you saw him listen to all of Peter’s voicemails eagerly even though he’d complain about it to the kid’s face; you know he memorized all of the kid’s favorite haunts and hobbies.
When Tony looked at Happy, he could easily see the new frown lines and worry wrinkles marking Happy’s face and wondered how he could have been so blind to have missed it before. Happy wasn’t crying—Tony didn’t think Happy had shed a single tear since that first day Tony had come back without the Spider-Kid in tow, and he’d been forced to admit that he’d (they’d) lost Peter Parker—but he might as well have been, for all the pain Tony could see in his eyes.
And Happy wasn’t the only other one who’d known Peter the same way he had: as the kid worth giving it all up for.
What about Peter’s friends? They didn’t look fine back at the school. They’re grieving for him, too. And what about May? 
What about May, Stark?
Tony knew he’d been selfish for too long. He’d thought that he was the only one who felt like Peter’s death had crushed the heart in his chest and transformed his universe irreversibly, but he knew now that he’d been wrong.
He stared at Happy, at this man who’d been his friend and who’d had his back for so long, and shivered at the gratitude reflected in his eyes. Tony didn’t deserve that. He didn’t deserve Happy looking at him like he’d done something good, when in reality all he’d done was what he should’ve done when he first landed.
Suddenly, a bone-deep weariness seeped into Tony. He needed to be better. He needed to see Peter again.
He’d told the world that he’d fight to the end to right Thanos’s wrongs. And he would. He’d fight harder than he ever had, because this time, it was Peter’s life at stake.
This time, he had so much on the line.
(“You need to get up, Tony,” Pepper whispered into the silence of their bedroom one night. Even their relationship had been stained by Thanos’s deeds. “You need to get better.”
The first time she’d begged him to stand, to rise again, he’d snapped at her. This time, he just looked at her, sad and weary, and asked searchingly, “How?”
Pepper flinched. “Call – call him, please. You don’t have to forgive him, but... the world needs the Avengers right now. And I need my fiancé. Please.”
“What can the Avengers do, Pep?” Tony was drained. “It’s already done. Thanos won, we lost. Half the universe is gone. There’s nothing anyone, even us so-called superheroes, can do now.”
“You can try,” she pleaded. “You can get back up on your feet and try.”
Tony’s open, vulnerable gaze shuttered. “I thought you hated that I was Iron Man. You’ve never wanted me to risk my life out there.”
“And I still don’t want you to now,” she admitted. “But I know who you are, Tony. And I know… I know that this—staying still, doing nothing—is killing you more than being Iron Man ever did. So get up, Tony. Bring Peter – bring him back. And come home to me, please.”
“I don’t know if I can,” Tony said weakly. “I’m not the Iron Man you know anymore. The fight with Thanos changed me. I used to be fearless, but now...”
“No,” Pepper shook her head resolutely, defiantly. “You weren’t fearless, Tony. You were reckless—there’s a difference.”
“Pep—”
“You dove headfirst into anything that would get you in trouble. You never thought of the consequences. You just... took risks. You lived like you didn’t have a care in the world.”
“And now?”
“And now you have more to lose,” Pepper said it like it was a fact, like it couldn’t be anything but the truth. Her words hit Tony harder than any of Thanos’s attacks had. “You can’t afford to be reckless anymore. If you’re more afraid nowadays, it’s because you care.”
Pepper molded her hand against his cheek, eyes soft and loving, but honest, too. “And it’s exactly because you have more to lose now that you’ll win.”
“I love you,” Tony choked out. “I love you. I love you.”
A sad smile tugged on her lips. “I love you, too. I believe in you.”)
Tony’s entire perspective had been shifted by Peter. Before he met Peter, he used to switch between categorizing the parts of his life as “Before and After Pepper” and “Before and After Iron Man.”
Now all he saw was “Before and After Peter.”
Pepper had been right. He had more to lose now. He had more to fight for, too.
Tony nodded at Happy, didn’t tell him You’re welcome, and knocked on the partition separating the front of the car from the back. 
A second later, the divider rolled down. “Yes, Boss?” Jim inquired.
Tony smiled a smile he didn’t feel. “Change of plans, Jim,” he announced. “Take us to May Parker’s apartment, please.”
Jim nodded obediently, already pulling up the address from FRIDAY’s database.
The partition went back up again.
“Tony?” Happy’s question went unspoken.
Tony looked back at the man. His smile grew a touch more real. “She shouldn’t be left alone,” was all he could say to that. “Not right now.”
Happy nodded in understanding, and that grateful look Tony felt so undeserving of took over his face again.
Tony ignored it.
☔︎
When they came knocking, May opened the door with a knowing look on her face. She’d clearly expected them to come her way, after watching the speech.
“May,” Tony greeted. He didn’t feel like breaking down at the mere sight of her anymore. That was something. Progress, am I right? 
He chuckled bitterly. Would you have been proud of me, Peter? 
May nodded back. There was gratitude in her eyes, too, so akin to Happy’s that Tony had to look away briefly. When he turned to her again, though, the expression was still there, shamelessly coloring her face.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
“You shouldn’t have to thank me,” Tony insisted. “It’s what Peter deserved.”
May smiled sadly. “He would have thought otherwise.”
The look on Tony’s face mirrored hers. “I know,” his voice was hushed. “I know.” He was wrong. He was so, so wrong. He deserved the world.
May swallowed tightly. Her eyes drifted from Tony to Happy, and the soul-crushing grief was back. “Oh, Happy,” she whispered. “You’re here.” May looked back at Tony. “You’re both here.”
Tony nodded. May, wordlessly, moved away from the doorway so they could both enter. Tony watched, guilt brewing in the pit of his stomach, as May slowly returned to the living room, moving with a decided lack of liveliness that unsettled him.
May was one of the strongest women he knew. She ranked right up there with the likes of Pepper Potts and Natasha Romanoff. To see her like this, so defeated, was wrong. 
There was nothing he could say about it. How could he judge her when he’d been the same way? When he still felt like that?
“Tea?” May offered, sinking into the sofa like it was the only thing holding her up. “Coffee?”
“No, that’s okay,” Tony shook his head politely, following May onto the sofa. Happy quietly settled in beside him.
“How are you doing, May?” Happy asked when Tony couldn’t, because how could he ask her that when he wouldn’t even know how to answer, if he was the one on the receiving end of that question?
May seemed to struggle with finding an answer, too. “I don’t know,” she said. “I’m just getting through all of this—life without Peter—day by day. Everyday.”
What else was there to do, when there was no reason to smile anymore?
“I’m still sorry,” Tony blurted out when the silence in the apartment and the restlessness in his head became too much. He pressed the underside of his palm against his head, willing away the voices to no avail.
May nodded. “I know, Tony. And you still have nothing to be sorry for.”
He looked away. Why didn’t she blame him?
It was his fault. Peter was gone—gone gone gone—and it was because of him.
“I dragged him into this life,” he argued. Why couldn’t she see that? 
“He became Spider-Man before he met you,” she pointed out.
“But he went onto that spaceship because of me,” the words stung to say, but they were true. “His exact words were ‘speaking of loyalty.’ He was there because he was blindly loyal to me, and I didn’t even have the decency to turn the ship back around. I have everything to be sorry for.”
“No, you don’t,” she insisted. “You were his hero. Of course he came after you.”
“I never meant to... I didn’t want him to get hurt. I just wanted to give him everything he wanted and more. I wanted to see him win over the whole world the way he won me over. God, May, he could’ve achieved so much,” his throat constricted around the words, and he had to fight to see, to breathe through the pain. “He could’ve done so many great things.”
“Amazing things,” Happy murmured.
“He had his whole life ahead of him,” Tony whispered, like it was a secret. “And it was stolen from him, just like that. Now he’ll never have the chance to show everyone else why he was the best kid all of us knew.”
“The very best,” May agreed, laughing wetly. “He could’ve changed the world.”
“He did change the world,” Tony corrected. “Spider-Man changed so many people’s lives for the better. He went out there every night and saved people who’d already resigned themselves to believing they couldn’t be saved. In every possible way, he was so much better than the Avengers, than me, because where we didn’t even realize we had a duty to save the ordinary people, too, Peter was already looking after all the little guys. Peter cared so much.”
A strangled sob tore out of May’s throat. She fell back against the sofa and cradled her head in her hands, crying violently, desperately.
“But Spider-Man wasn’t the only one who made a difference. Peter Parker changed the world, too,” Tony said earnestly. “He changed mine.”
May cried harder.
“I’ll never stop being sorry,” Tony whispered the words like a prayer. “He was my kid, but May, he was your son, and I – fuck, I can’t—”
“It wasn’t your fault. You didn’t do this,” she denied hoarsely. She didn’t know how many times she had to repeat it to get him to believe it. “I know you loved him, too. Better than anyone, I know the effect Peter has on people. He’s been changing my world since he was six, after all.”
Tony closed his eyes.
“I hate Thanos,” May‘s voice quivered as her chest heaved and she gasped for breath. “He took Peter from me. He took my boy, Tony. He was – he was all I had left. When Ben died, I felt like drowning, but Peter was always there to save me. But what am I supposed to do now? How do I bounce back from losing my child?”
Tony didn’t have an answer.
The truth was, he’d been asking himself the same thing over and over again, on repeat, for three weeks.
How am I supposed to say goodbye to you?
How am I supposed to live like this?
How am I supposed to heal?
He couldn’t.
All he could do was hold onto Peter’s memory like a lifeline.
All he could do was keep fighting for the day Peter, and everyone else who’d disappeared, could come back. 
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hellyeahomeland · 4 years
Text
“In Full Flight”: an HYH recap
The most delightful Homeland episode since “Two Minutes” picks up with Mike, Jenna (in a chambray shirt), and Alan in Kabul station, observing drone footage of Carrie, Yevgeny, and crew. Jenna deduces that they’re probably going to Kohat, and she is correct for the first time all season.
Mike asks about an exfiltration team from Islamabad but they won’t be there until later tonight. Saul interrupts their pow-wow to ask what’s going on:
Saul: What is this about grabbing Carrie Mathison? Mike: Oh, hello, sir. Let’s go into my office. Saul: Fuck your office and fuck you, too. What are y’all talking about? Mike: No problem, sir. A special ops team is planning to grab Carrie. You know, because she’s a defector. Saul: FOR FUCK’S SAKE SHE IS NOT A DEFECTOR. Actually she’d be right here telling you that herself if you hadn’t cornered her like an animal three hours ago without telling me. Mike: Actually actually she was supposed to be back in America like a week ago but then she broke custody and started her adventure with a GRU officer. Now they’re out there doing God knows what. Sir.  Saul: I’ll tell you what they’re doing. They’re finding the flight recorder. Mike: What’s a flight recorder? Saul: I can’t believe I’m still having this conversation with you. Do any of y’all have brains or critical thinking skills? Mike: By the way, sir, you’ve been called back to DC. Saul: Fuck my whole life. Fuck all of you too.
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Carrie and Yevgeny are very much on their way to Kohat. It’s been just a few hours since Carrie turned her back on Saul and her loaded expression as she stares out the window is very much “questioning all my past life decisions.” That could take a while, Carrie!
Carrie and Yevgeny arrive in Kohat and begin driving under a series of … I have no idea what they are, basically overhangs in the street so you can’t tell where their car is. It’s very “From A to B and Back Again” when Quinn lost Haqqani in the classic baseball stadium game “Which hat is the ball under?” trick. The team in Kabul is annoyed and prepares for a grid search.
Carrie & Co. are checking into a hotel for the night. Yevgeny makes a very obvious performance of leading Carrie to her room and what ensues is the most sexually tense scene on this show… ever. First he offers her some Ambien and Carrie cracks a joke for the first time in eight years and says she could open up a pharmacy of her own.
She apologizes for not telling him about the flight recorder sooner. At first it was all personal, she needed to find Max, she couldn’t focus on anything else. Yevgeny asks what she thinks actually happened to the presidents’ helicopter, since she certainly doesn’t believe Jalal was involved. She thinks it was probably just a freak accident: pilot error, mechanical failures, shitty weather, any or all of the above. Then she reveals that detail from the fifth episode, that the Black Hawk fleet has had a series of mechanical issues. Oh, I should add that this conversation all takes place in the doorway of Carrie’s hotel room and every fifteen seconds or so Carrie and/or Yevgeny glance back toward the bed. You can cut the sexual tension with a knife.
Yevgeny asks if there are any more secrets she’s been keeping from him. She smiles, pauses… it’s the most interesting moment. Then she says very quietly, “I think I’m fresh out of secrets.” They stare at each other for a long time, Yevgeny probably wondering if Carrie is going to invite him in and Carrie probably wondering if Yevgeny can take a fucking hint. Finally, I exhale, and Yevgeny says to just “bang on the wall” if Carrie needs anything, which at least elicits a laugh.
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Elsewhere in Pakistan, a Pakistani military officer named Aziz has come to see Bunny to ask just where the fuck Tasneem is. Aziz is pissed because Tasneem was supposed to control the Taliban—first Haissam, then Jalal—and her “incompetence” has led to the Americans threatening to invade. Bunny is the opposite of worried. The Americans are all talk, no bite. They won’t actually invade Pakistan for failing to produce a man they claim they can’t find. I guess he hasn’t met John Zabel. Anyway, he says Tasneem is off to find Jalal somewhere in the mountains.
Instead, she actually meets (Haissam) Haqqani’s right-hand. She is beyond pissed that he just let Jalal control the shura last week. This is all so fucked. He doesn’t have much of a response, beyond, “well, he was the emir’s son, so I guess so?” He offers to take Tasneem to Jalal but only if she puts a hood over her head and lemme tell ya, Tasneem is none too pleased about that either!
It’s the next morning in Kohat and Carrie and Yevgeny really are going shopping, just like the logline said. They’re winding their way through the bazaars on the street but still no luck finding this flight recorder. Enter A Kid. He’s all “pardon me, excuse me,” and Yevgeny puts on his best Dad Hat and tells him to get lost. It’s very touching. Then he says he knows what they’re looking for, which is enough to get their attention.
He takes them to a shop where Mr. Shop Owner #1 is like, “Hi, do you like flight recorders? Because I’ve got lots!” Unfortunately he doesn’t have the one they’re looking for and he also seems pretty skittish because a) what the hell are a Russian and an American doing together? and b) is this official government business or something private or, like… just generally what the hell?
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Saul has arrived back to DC and meets Hayes in the Oval Office with our favorite Odd Couple, Linus and Zabel (this should really be the name of a sitcom). Saul passively aggressively says he knows of Zabel “by reputation.” Aside from that jab, the meeting unfortunately goes from meh to ugh to wtf for Saul. He has to play bad cop and tell Hayes that the video of Jalal is unvetted intelligence, completely lacking in context, and probably just a straight-up lie. Hayes has the expression of someone who’s never followed Thought A to Thought B—which is true, obviously—and Zabel has to jump in to say of course POTUS has already done the Thought A to Thought B exercise, he just arrived at a different conclusion. You know, mine! The best part of all THIS is that as Saul grows increasingly incredulous at the conversation, Linus sits there, silently, looking like he’d like to be swallowed up by an alligator. Afterward:
Saul: Wow a bit of warning would have been helpful. Or maybe just an assist there, Linus. Linus: I didn’t even know you were coming back. I’m outside the ~information flow~ Saul: God, we’re so fucked. Linus: I wish I’d get swallowed by an alligator.
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Back in Kohat, Carrie has entered another shop, this time sans Yevgeny. This one proves a bit more fruitful. She actually finds Max’s rucksack, which means that flight recorder had to have been here recently. Mr. Shop Owner #2 feigns ignorance, but Carrie is relentless.
Yevgeny enters all of a sudden to let her know that that special ops team from Islamabad is here, so they need to get out of there, pronto. He leaves quickly to lose the tail and instructs her to go back to the hotel and wait. His absence gives her the perfect opportunity to keep grilling Mr. Shop Owner #2, whom I actually love and seems really sweet. Poor guy is just no match for Carrie. He finally reveals the flight recorder was there but he sold it to a broker he works with. Carrie offers him a lot of money to find the broker and get the flight recorder back there for a trade at midnight.
Tasneem gets the black hood off her head in exchange for an audience with Jalal, but homie remains pissed. Jalal is sort of confused at her reaction. A few episodes ago she was plotting to put Jalal in the place he’s currently in. What changed? Well, for starters, now the Americans are threatening to invade Pakistan. She says he’s got to go to ground, but he refuses to run.
Jalal: Who do you think I am? Tasneem: You’re the loser whom I picked up on the side of the road. I bandaged your feet and listened to you crying about your daddy issues for hours. Jalal: You think that you control us. Actually it’s the other way around.
He leads her up to a rooftop where hundreds of Taliban fighters have gathered. He says the last time the ISI got in the way, they killed a thousand of their officers on the street. And now they’re twice as strong, so you do the math. Tasneem has a general “oh fuck” expression on her face and… same.
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In Kohat, Yevgeny finally shows back up in Carrie’s hotel room. He reveals that eight men are hunting her and they need to leave, now. She says they can’t, as they haven’t found the flight recorder yet. Of course we know Carrie has found it—and in hindsight, at this point Yevgeny probably does as well—but she needs to stick around a few more hours to make the trade. For a split second you think maybe Carrie is going to preoccupy Yevgeny for a few hours in her bedroom but instead she calls Jenna.
Carrie: Hey, how’s it going? Jenna: OH MY GOD I STILL HATE YOU. Carrie: Chill for a second. Also I know you’re walking toward Mike and do yourself a favor and pause and just listen to me. Jenna: Ugh, fine, I’m listening. Carrie: I need you to give up the location of the exfil team that’s looking for me. Jenna: Are you high? Carrie: I am not, but you are if you think this will end up any other way than me convincing you. Jenna: You’re putting me in an impossible position. Carrie: You must do this. I compel you. Jenna: If I give up their location, you’ll turn yourself in there? Carrie: “Sure.” Jenna: Ok I’ll call you back.
This entire conversation transpires with Yevgeny sitting on the sofa in Carrie’s hotel room, legs crossed. It’s… I’ll be honest, it’s hot. When Carrie hangs up he applauds her performance and says she was clever and convincing. That’s right, Carrie played Jenna… again. Again! Again again again!
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Carrie is kinda down on selling out her own people but Yevgeny says she did it for all the right reasons and in any case, the local police will only hold them for a day (uhhhh yeah right). He starts to compliment her strong instincts. He really respects her for that.
“Why, how do you do it?” Carrie asks.
“Me? I am more of a planner,” Yevgeny answers.
The alarm bells start ringing in her head and Carrie asks him all speaking of which whether he arranged for them to “run into each other” outside G’ulom’s office way back in the season premiere (show time: 10 days???). Before he can answer, Jenna rings back and tells Carrie the safe house location. Carrie says “you did the right thing” and the amount of self-disgust in her expression for this just being too fucking easy is … significant.
A few minutes later, Mike is on the phone with one of the special ops team members in the Kohat safe house. Local police have surrounded the building. Exasperated, Mike tells them to stand down. One by one, they file out and are led into custody. Jenna watches in horror and the amount of self-disgust in her expression for this just being her life is… also significant.
In Rawalpindi, Tasneem is at Bunny’s house and freaking out. Jalal has consolidated power extremely quickly. She’s concerned, but Bunny says they just need to take him out, root and branch. Bunny is offended by the prospect of being ordered around by a smarmy teenager but Tasneem thinks they need to protect him. If Pakistan protects Jalal, they’ll protect themselves too. And they need to respond to the Americans not with concessions but with threats just as strong. Remember when they were three minutes away from a generation-defining peace agreement?
Back in her hotel room, Carrie is growing restless. She decides to get some fresh air and by that I mean she jumps out the window to get the show on the fucking road. On the way she calls Saul, to whom she is apparently still speaking. She asks if their protocols for transferring money over the dark web are still a go and he says yes. She says she’s got a lead on the black box and he promises to arrange the funds ASAP.  
Carrie winds up back at Mr. Shop Owner #2’s shop. Mr. Shop Owner #1 is there, too! Plus the broker. They do a little thing, Carrie says she won’t pay any more than $999,999, she is very In Charge and it’s pretty great to see. Not that we needed any more convincing, but the kind of instincts and improvisation Yevgeny admired just a few hours earlier are on full display here. She knows exactly what to say, when to say it, and how to say it. It’s breathtaking.
What’s also breathtaking is Carrie doing something correctly with a computer. Apparently the black box just hooks up to her Macbook with a USB-C cord… whoulda thunk?! After pulling a gun on Mr. Broker and telling him to beat it, she starts listening to the cockpit recording.
Then Yevgeny arrives! She starts to apologize but he stops her—he just wants to listen. They each share an earbud like goddamn Jim and Pam and continue listening. Turns out, Carrie was right. No one shot down that helicopter. A freak mechanical malfunction, “brace for impact,” etc. “Fucking helicopters,” Yevgeny says.
Carrie attempts a segue and says, “So… what now?” She wants to get this to the embassy in Islamabad. He wants to do the opposite of that. Then Carrie starts on him. Maybe he’s not such a bad guy after all. Maybe he’s actually… good.
Carrie: Plus, I’d owe you a favor. Yevgeny: Carrie, if I drop you off at the embassy I’ll literally never see you again. Carrie: Not true. I won’t betray my country, but I’d still move to Scottsdale with you. Yevgeny: I still don’t believe you. Carrie: Why not? You’ve already helped me a ton, and it’s cost you nothing! There has to be a way where we can make a “mutually beneficial arrangement.” Yevgeny: Is that what they’re calling it these days? Carrie: What? Yevgeny: What? Carrie: …anyhow, aren’t you sick of all this bullshit? Shitty bosses, shitty politicians, clearly the current way of business isn’t working for us. We could do better. You and me. We could chart something new here. You and me. God, we’re already halfway there! Yevgeny: Our own private network, huh? That would be nice, but it’s a pipe dream. Also, I like what you’re saying, but you still lied to me. Carrie: Technically, I just withheld the truth. Which is exactly what you did to me. Yevgeny: Heh? Carrie: The asylum, Yevgeny. What actually happened? We just took long walks in the woods and shared our life stories and you just happened to be the there the day I tried to hang myself? Give me a fucking break.
She moves closer and mentions the whole “picking up where we left off” thing. Well, will he or won’t he? Because she’s already decided.
There is a long pause and then they start making out. It’s exactly what you’d expect it would be, by which I mean it’s really hot! The scene is fraught with the unknown. How much are they playing each other? How much are they being genuine? Like Carrie says, they’re living in the grey areas. And who’s the first to blink?
Evidently it’s Carrie. After a few moments she breaks away and says they need to wait until after Islamabad. “Ok,” he says quietly. She tries to kiss him again, but he pulls ever so slightly away.
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She hops off the table and begins to pack up the flight recorder. At that moment, he stabs her in the neck from behind with a tranquilizer. “Sorry, baby,” he says as she falls unconscious.
In DC, Saul is waiting anxiously by the phone. It rings. It’s not Carrie, but Linus. Everyone’s in the situation room, there’s some sort of activity in one of Pakistan’s nuclear facilities. Saul’s day goes from bad to worse.
In the situation room, resident hottie Scott Ryan is giving a PowerPoint presentation about said activity. Hayes is trying to understand literally anything that’s happening. Zabel explains that Pakistan only has the nukes in the first place to defend against a possible invasion from India. They’ll never actually use them. Saul growls that that’s because India isn’t fucking stupid enough to invade Pakistan. Hayes is beginning to understand the whole concept of “consequences” but before his mind can dwell on that for too long, he decides to just up the ante. More troops, more preparations for war, more of the same.
Saul’s day is not possibly as bad as Carrie’s has wound up. Yevgeny carries her, still unconscious, back into the hotel room. He places her gingerly on the bed and then kisses her forehead. He shuts off the lights as the camera moves in slowly on her her peacefully sleeping face.
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maximofos · 7 years
Text
Bouquets and Clichés
Pairing: Bucky Barnes x Reader
Summary: Amidst the champagne, bad food, and terrible bridesmaid dresses could lie the start of a very good love story.
Warning: omg this is the 2nd most cliché thing I’ve ever written
“Y/N! There you are!” Wanda sidles up to you, hands delicately clutching the bottom of her dress so she doesn’t step on it. “We’re having a hairspray crisis.”
You just laugh, adding the finishing touch to your makeup. “There’s another can in my bag. Seriously, though, how much hairspray can four women go through in one day?”
Wanda spills out all the contents of your bag looking for the extra hairspray. She finally finds it and lets out a victory cry, rushing back into the other dressing area. You follow her, laughing to yourself. There’s already a cloud of hairspray forming from where Wanda is attacking Sharon’s hair with it.
Your heart lights up with happiness when you see Natasha. You can’t remember a time when she’s ever glowed this much. Her red hair is perfectly curled, and her ivory dress is impeccable. The skirt hugs to her frame, showing off her physique. The front comes around in a halter neck but her back is left bare. It’s the most beautiful you’ve ever seen your friend, and you couldn’t be happier for her.
“Okay, now that we’re all here and we’re actually put together instead of running around in robes,” Natasha holds up a glass of champagne and Sharon passes one to you, “I’d like to make a toast. Who would’ve thought any of us would be here to celebrate this day?”
The four of you chuckle, remembering your most recent mission. Half of the team had almost gotten blown up and the other half arrested. It hadn’t gone well but everyone made it out relatively unharmed. Such was the nature of your job.
“To Natasha and Bruce,” Wanda toasts. The rest of the group repeats it, raising your glasses and clinking them together. You touch the glass to your lips and before you can even take a sip, Pepper pokes her head through the door.
“Ladies, it’s time.”
Wanda, Sharon, and you all let out a breath, but Natasha remains perfectly composed, a smile on her face. “Nervous?” you ask, escorting her out the door to the main hall.
“Not at all,” she replies. You can tell she’s not lying. The only emotion in her eyes is complete and utter happiness. Love has turned your best friend into a sap. “How are you feeling?”
You sigh good-naturedly, handing her the bouquet and picking up yours. “There is nothing cheesier than being the only unmarried bridesmaid at a wedding taking place on Valentine’s Day.”
She laughs as you get into place behind the other two bridesmaids. “Just wait until after the ceremony. I’m going to hand you the bouquet.”
You groan, “Don’t you dare.” Slowly, the doors open and a breath of fresh air hits you in the face. Sharon walks out first, keeping pace with the music. She takes her place at the foot of the stone stage and then it’s Wanda’s turn. Soon enough, it’s your turn to step out into the bright natural light.
Natasha and Bruce hadn’t wanted a long engagement, which makes sense considering what a life-threatening occupation being an Avenger is – one never knows if they’re going to see tomorrow, let alone months from now. They also didn’t want to fuss about wedding planning. They much rather would have gone to the courthouse, but as Natasha’s best friend, you had put your foot down. If they didn’t want to plan a wedding, you’d do it for them. And you’d make it the most spectacular wedding ever. Enlisting Pepper’s help had been easy, and soon enough the wedding plans were finished. It had taken less than two months.
As you walk down the white carpet pathway to the stone stage, you can’t help but marvel at how much better it had turned out than you had imagined. You’d picked a secluded spot that matched their need for a small wedding. The sunlight beaming down into the clearing gave everything a magical quality. Piles of red and white rose petals lined the aisle and matching roses formed an archway over the stage where Natasha’s shy husband-to-be stood. The white folding chairs were filled with Avengers, former agents of SHIELD, and other miscellaneous superheroes. It was the perfect setting for a romantic wedding.
Taking your place beside Wanda, you watch as the audience stands up to face Natasha for her big entrance. As the music changes and Natasha steps through the doors, you can’t help but look at Bruce. His face says it all. His eyes glow with pride and love, and the grin on his face threatens to split in two. A million years ago, you wouldn’t have believed two people like Bruce and Natasha could ever fall in love, but here you were and if their faces weren’t enough to prove it, this day was.
Watching the two of them exchange vows, you can’t help but recall what you said to Natasha earlier. It’s not that you weren’t fine being single. You didn’t need a man to make you happy. But if there was ever a place to dwell on the fact that your love life is severely lacking, this was it.
You find yourself at the open bar once the reception moves inside. Mostly everyone is slow dancing with their respective partners, Nat and Bruce, Steve and Sharon, Wanda and Vision, Pepper and Tony. Thor has Jane, Clint has Laura, even Peter brought some cute little redhead girl as his date. A select few of you (you, Bucky, Pietro, Scott, Sam, and T’Challa) had chosen to go stag. After three glasses of champagne and two shots of something a little harder, you start to wish you’d just chosen to come with Pietro. At least you probably would’ve gotten lucky afterward.
“Y/N Y/L/N, what are you doing moping around here?” You look to your left to see your former director Nick Fury has taken the stool beside you. He orders a glass of whiskey from the bartender. “Doesn’t Barnes need a dance partner?”
You snort unattractively. “I’m sure there are plenty of nice women here who would love to tango with him.”
“It’d probably be more like swing dancing,” Fury says. “Don’t tell me you’re throwing a pity party for yourself.”
“I was but you crashed it,” you mumble, sipping your next drink through a straw. At the rate you’re going, you’ll be shitfaced before they even cut the cake. “I mean look, I’m the only woman here without a husband or so much as a boyfriend. I haven’t been on a date in weeks, and even then it was some awful blind date with a guy who smelled like tuna fish. Hell, I haven’t had sex in six months! I’m practically a nun.” The drinking is making you rant, and you can’t help the stuff spilling out of your mouth.
“You should not be telling me, your boss, about this,” deadpans Fury.
You wave the comment off with your hand. “You’re not my boss anymore. Steve is.”
“Actually,” a new voice corrects. Tony moves behind the bar, grabbing a bottle of liquor, and pouring himself a glass. “Tony is.”
You snort again, mumbling a “yeah, okay,” into your glass. The three of you stay there in comfortable silence for a few minutes before another new voice cuts in. “Is this where the outcast losers hang out?” Bucky grumbles, taking the bar stool on the other side of you.
Fury and Tony look at each other knowingly, taking their glasses and leaving you and Bucky alone together. You hardly notice. “What’s got your panties in a twist?” you ask him.
He nods his head over his shoulder, taking a swig of something from a flask. It smells strongly of that liquor Thor brings from Asgard. “Look at ‘em.” You look over your shoulder to see all the happy couples dancing and having a good time.
“You can’t begrudge them. At least they seem happy.” You’d give anything to be in that group right now instead of on the sidelines lonely and drunk.
“And meanwhile, we’re here,” Bucky sighs, “at the bottom of the barrel.”
You nudge your shoulder against his. “We haven’t quite hit rock bottom yet.”
“Race ya,” he replies, taking another sip from his flask. You try not to pay too much attention to the way his metal hand wraps around it for fear of turning yourself on.
You laugh, swirling your drink around with your straw, your chin in the other hand. “I would’ve thought you’d be fine coming alone. Didn’t think you’d be ready to get back out there yet.”
“Doll, I haven’t had sex in seventy years. I need back out there pronto.” You both laugh and you realize in the comfortable silence how much you enjoy Bucky’s company. You also notice just how close the two of you are sitting. His legs are spread open and yours are crossed, your foot tucked right behind his knee.
You bite your lip, dredging up the courage to say, “If you ever wanna go out sometime, or even if you just want to be close to someone, you know where to find me.”
His eyes drift past you for a moment before they land back on you. Bucky smiles at you, a new light twinkling in his eye. “I think I’m gonna take you up on that. Tomorrow even.” You smirk at him, glad you’re on the same page. He leans in closer to you and whispers, “But not before I take you out to dinner.”
“Sergeant Barnes,” you muse. From the look on his face, you can tell he likes it when you call him sergeant. Good to know. “such a gentleman.”
“You haven’t seen anything yet,” he says. The song playing in the room changes, coincidentally to one of your favorites. He stands up, holding out a hand for you. “Come on, doll. They’re playing our song.”
As Bucky leads you out to the dancefloor, you don’t even notice that Natasha’s bouquet now lay right where Fury had been sitting on the other side of you.
A/N: I have no idea where this came from, holy shit. I apologize for the terrible ships in this story but it was the best way I could make it work.  
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fairest · 6 years
Text
DIDN’T GO TO TWITTER YESTERDAY - September 13, 2018
As for what’s next, I will leave that to the specialists.
Music is my mistress, Duke said.
There were a few others.
Duke had a Tristan chord of mistresses, a Lulu chord of broads.
Duke’s mistresses in tutti frutti.
I saw this heartbreaking Caufieldian thing yesterday. 
Good thing I didn’t have my nose down in Twitter or I might have missed it.
I was walking by the American Stock Exchange … this old couple took a photo … the man went and stood by the art deco handles of the ASE …  the ‘militarized police’ … whatever that means … don’t guard the ASE ... I don’t even think it trades anymore .. it used to be called the New York Curb because the traders stood outside like guys wearing mattress signs ... anyway … he held the door handles … his wife snapped a photo, they both laughed, he shrugged his shoulders, they laughed again and kept walking toward the 9/11 memorial … his pants needed shortening it was really sweet.
In my Caufieldian head I decided … that man worked at the ASE early in his career … they were some of the most exciting months of his life … he seduced, in part, his wife with some of his stories … and then he moved to Ohio and met this lovely woman, his wife … he cries when he thinks about her hair in the sunlight from before all the treatments … he made her shave her pussy in 1999 because Britney Spears did it … so she would look like a milf who couldn’t get enough cock … and then he tried to soothe his wife’s razor burn with the same ice pack he used on his bad shoulder … and she almost killed him and died from laughing … and they raised 4 exceptional children … one of them almost got into Oberlin and had Hannah Horvath as a freshman buddy … and now the couple are in New York … it’s her first time EVER … it’s his first time in 40 years … and he said he wanted to take a picture in front of the ASE … cause he worked there right after college for two months … but by the time they got there it was just whatever … still … she snapped the picture, and now they have it.
He’s just this cog in the wheel from Ohio with 4 children who worked at the ASE as a runner 40 years ago, before he got his real job at Raytheon or Toyota.
The cog in the wheel is heart wrenching.
What freaks me out about the WTC is not that it’s gone, or all this memorial stuff that took its place, but that the Burger King across the street is still there.
So is Pronto Pizza, so is the Essex World Café where they have good 1000 Island dressing for burgers.
I’m not going to write: that used to be my brain, now it’s a CVS. That used to be my heart, now it’s a Sweet Greens.
So many beautiful people in New York, who invited you.
It occurred to me today I might be so uncomfortable because I no longer live down the street.
I have this note here: yesterday you missed a good idea in the women giving up. Maybe women have too much dignity to “give up.” Maybe they have too much respect for work, for the muse, to say, like Markson’s copycats, David Shields or Karl Ove or whatever, I just give up, here’s a list of shit I like and shit I felt on this day or that day … although it seems like Eileen Myles gave up, but I don’t think she’d put it that way, or what about Kanye, same idea.
America doesn’t smell like anything.
I know, I’ve been to America, I live in America, and America doesn’t smell.
New York smells.
Rotting cooked flesh and cooked flesh rotting.
That’s what you’re paying for.
America, on the other hand, is one big odorless Kardashian vagina.
I have this note here: don’t add ‘…with a shived off clit…’ it’s not really you, even if it came out right after, it’s not really the good you, that’s not what you want to say, let the chapo trap house dudes say shit like that, they have the guts, they are truly mean men, whereas you, you’re a nice, scared, standard friendly guy, and your body shakes during confrontations.
America is odorless like Caitlyn Jenner’s vagina, affection will solve every problem of freedom.
This diary is about not going to Twitter
Dear diary, what if I am lying to you? 
Maybe I’m on Twitter right now, sending David Frum DMs that say, you frum?
I’ll frum you … I’ll frum you from behind … but don’t tell me I have to keep it … because I’ve got two x chromosomes.
This diary will end when September ends, and then it will be a book.
You know it.
I know it.
Will you stay with me until October?
What makes me a true New Yorker is that I can stand anywhere in New York and not move.
What a myth it is, that an ex-New Yorker remembers everything about New York. 
I don’t remember shit.
A great male writer returns to New York after 25,000 years and remembers which train car you need to be on for the 14th Street exit, and which train car you want for Vesey over Barclay.
The last great myth of the male writer, before this one.
Yeah that’s bullshit, I have no fucking idea where I am.
I’m so emotionally unavailable in this place I almost pronounce the ‘h’ in humor.
Today’s entry is just about how I walked around the city making associations, it’s pretty bitter, empty, vulgar, boring, I’ve done this, I’ve done that, what, for 10,000 days of my life and many more.
Funny story, I am the only punk in New York.
I run you to 21.
I see the car in front of you.
Americans are turned off by Marx because Marx smells like something that needs coriander.
Stop saying Marx.
Just stop.
Stop.
And when you’re finished not saying Marx, don’t say Marx again.
I just think of Richard Marx when you say Marx, stop saying Marx and I’ll be right here, waiting for you.
I’ll take an adult erection course, as long as they don’t make me read Marx.
Here’s a funny story, I was running for the train ... get out of my way turista ... I am a great male writer on my way to discuss Richard Marx at the New School … they have a scrumptious prepared egg salad sandwich in the cafeteria … it’s going to dribble from my mouth when I tell the youth there are no ethical egg salad sandwiches under capitalism … and I would’ve made the train but I didn’t have a metro card … just my Ventra card from back in Chicago.
I had to go buy a Metro Card, and the fare is like $2.75 now, I remember when they paid you $40 to ride the train. 
I won’t write that CVS used to be my liver, or that this Joe and the Juicer was my grandmother’s pancreas, but the Joe and the Juicer across the street was divined from my father’s seed the last time he masturbated in 1987.
I can’t hear.
Should I listen to Illmatic and pretend it still loves me?
When I read a great essay I google the writer’s name … and then I see they have a twitter … and I think, oh, they have a twitter, that’s so touching, let me follow them and see the other things they write … what’s even more touching is when they don’t have a twitter at all … actually that’s just weird .. you can’t be a human being without a social media presence.
My founding myth as a writer was my college professor telling me I didn’t have the guts to be a writer.
You are very talented Stuart, he said, but I don’t think you have the guts.
I’ve gone through my whole life as a desperate amateur who thinks he thinks asking more questions than I can answer and it’s killing me constantly, this bearded professorial voice in my head saying I don’t have the guts, what it takes, last licks, to be a writer.
This is what I heard: you are too unique.
You are too unique, too pure, too clean, too afraid of being a total loser, to be a real writer.
Maybe you can express yourself in cascading major ninth chords, but you cannot express yourself in words.
Keep writing, you’ll get better at it, you might even get better at it than a few other people, but people will never relate to all that you say. You will never make a reader cry. People will relate to some of what you say, but never all of it. Scribbled private notebooks for your secret joy stolen from someone else’s notebook. You don’t have the guts to be a writer. You don’t have the sac to relate. 
I can’t move faster than the speed of my forgetfulness.
People always say there’s so much brain power in New York, Berlin, wherever. People always say the best minds come here, but I don’t know, all these people look slightly dumber than me.
There are people standing in line to buy sneakers and I can’t help them.
No one ever says there’s so much brain power in Compton.
Thought about tweeting today:
back in NYC, the rotten apple, feast of san gennaro, hope I don’t get whacked.
I rub my wife’s ankles and calves, we make lists, we cross things off. We ask if our kid shit or if it just smells like shit in this Rite Aid, which used to be a discotheque.
It must be so depressing to be a super model, no friends.
Fake tits look so gross, all these Brenda Walsh jeans.
Every time I see a picture of Jennifer Lawrence for Gucci or Aldi or Chanel I say to my wife, she got mad in like 2014 or whatever when there were pictures of her tits … that was before Twitter really poisoned the discourse …it was totally okay to see Britney Spears’ cunny in 1999 or some shit but not J-Law’s white breast, that’s where we DREW THE LINE … you cannot see J-Law’s tits.
The men are even worse.
Really looking forward to Lady Gaga falling into Bradley Cooper’s arms in the new A Star is Born.
Too handsome to be this straight and dress this gay.
How depressing to wear dress shoes without socks and shorten your pants, show your ankles, really gross, just go work for the American Stock Exchange for 90 years and buy 38X34s Dockers with flex stretch like the rest of the honorable five foot seven men of this country.
German men too tall carrying babies, men who are too tall for war, shave your stupid beard.
Why don’t you stop pretending to be a fake European, there are enough fake Europeans in Europe and Saudi Arabia.
Air conditioners dripping, business won’t make it.
I am looking for my voice (the first thing I had).
For an American, it almost seems like New Yorkers don’t speak English.
It is too fast, this language. 
You know how in Paris you order the wrong thing because you don’t speak French .. then you see what the real ugly French people are eating, and you’re like .. damn! … that looks so good! …I’m only here for 2 more nights! I will never figure it out and then I’ll be back in America where all the pigs taste like lambs! And the cows taste like pigs! And the chickens taste like cows! And all of it tastes like shit and you can’t smell a goddamned thing! Fuck I wish I spoke French!!!! Then I could be eating what those ugly French people over there are eating it’s a calf’s balls!!! goddmnit I’m an American legal citizen! My people have killed more cows than Indians! I deserve your calf’s balls! …  well I feel like people who speak English, as a first language, people from, like, Shanksville Pa. or wherever … fluent English speakers … who can pass hard tests in English … they come down to a deli by the 9/11 memorial, they stand under the mall and its oculus and they want an everything toasted with a little butter and two fried eggs with well-done home fries on the side … but they don’t know how to say it … their English tenses up, goes fucking nuts … they order the wrong thing, a plain bagel ... not even a bagel .. they end up with a FLATBREAD ... untoasted ... with egg whites and sliced tomatoes on the side … it’s so horrible ... they’re like, shit, I just want to go to Panera ... New York bagels are overrated and you can’t find a good tomato west of Sicily … there is so much pressure on human beings, they fail, mostly, but they don’t lose hope.  
Paninis and parms piled high in front of house freezers, butcher hands naming cuts with blue-ribbon toothpicks. The most boring looking British woman in $7,000 flats, a man with a utility kipah and hands full of accordion files.
I said to my son, Alexander Hamilton is buried here and so are you.
Tonight before dinner my uncle produced his article, handed it to me, said, Stu, this is what I was talking about last night at dinner.
My uncle wrote a 22 page article about two fields and gardens poets.
Double-spaced, he said, about 22 pages.
He sent it to his teacher in China.
My uncle’s hands shake now. He used to drive and make jokes. He doesn’t drive anymore. He doesn’t make jokes about his wife anymore, but if I make a good joke about my wife, which happens quite often, my uncle laughs.
He wrote a 22 page double-spaced article and the last line is: as for what’s next, I will leave that to the specialists.
He said he understood if I didn’t have time to read it, what with my job, my own novel, my son, he knows I’m a busy young man.
I told him I could skim some of it now and then he could email it to me and I would let him know some comments in further detail. I said I didn’t know much about the field and garden poets, although I had read some David Hinton and I’ve seen a postcard or two in my day.
My uncle said the title was actually Two Poets, Two Magistrates, Three Dynasties.
I told him I thought that was a good title. And that all writing should end with the sentence ‑ as for what’s next, I will leave that to the specialists.
As for what’s next, I will leave that to the specialists.
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