WebNovels

Chapter 2 - A New Life pt.2

The next day, MJ showed up unannounced.

I was dead to the world, snoring into my pillow, when she threw the door

wide open and chirped, "Morning, sunshine!"

"Wha?!" I yelled, jolting out of bed ready to fight. I'd had a nightmare

about the Green Goblin coming to kill me while singing 'Itsy Bitsy

Spider.' Not a pleasant dream. I blinked the sleep from my eyes and

realised MJ was staring at me.

"Oh. It's you, MJ. Sorry about that. Nasty dream," I grumbled, rubbing

my hair. But she didn't say anything. She was staring at me.

"MJ? You okay?"

"Ah-huh," she nodded dumbly, her eyes drifting down. I looked down and

realised I wasn't wearing a shirt. It had been too hot.

I blushed. "Ah… maybe you should wait outside."

"No, I'm good right here," she shook her head, eyes not leaving me. She

whistled. "Damn. Looks like I just hit the jackpot!"

"Dude! Seriously!"

"What? You saw me in my PJs!"

"Hey—I didn't stare!"

"Oh please. You were totally checking me out."

"I—well… okay, but—ah! Out, MJ!" I turned her around and pushed her

towards the door.

"I don't know why you're so upset," she chuckled as I closed the door

behind her. "You should be happy a girl's checking you out!"

"Out!" I grumbled, slamming it shut.

I got ready quickly, pulling on a fresh shirt and jeans, then headed

downstairs to find Aunt May and Uncle Ben already hosting MJ at the

table.

"So are you excited for your first day?" Ben asked MJ.

"Yes, Mr. Parker. Peter's been helping me prepare, so I think I'll be

fine with the subjects," MJ smiled.

"Well that's lovely, dear. I'm glad you two are getting along so well,"

Aunt May smiled. She spotted me coming down the stairs. "Ah—speak of the

devil!"

I glared at MJ. "Peeping Tom."

"Suck it up, Tiger," she smirked.

"Morning, Uncle Ben. Aunt May," I greeted them as I sat down and started

on the bacon. I turned to MJ. "What's up, Peepers?"

"Are you still on that?" MJ asked, rolling her eyes.

"Peepers," I repeated with a glare.

"Whatever. Anyway—I have exciting news!" She pulled out two tickets and

practically shoved them in my face. "Hamlet. Apollo Theater. Tonight.

You in?"

I took the tickets and whistled. "Damn. These are great seats. How'd you

get them?"

"My mom got them for me," MJ smiled. "She wants me to get used to the

city and have some fun. So… you in?"

"Most definitely!" I said, before feeling two glares bore into me. I

gulped and turned to my aunt and uncle. "You know… if that's okay with

you two."

Ben's glare softened instantly. "Of course it is, kiddo! Have fun!"

May groaned. "I don't know, Ben. It's awfully late. They'll have to take

the train back, and you know the stories about those late-night trips."

"Oh, it'll be fine. Our Peter here will just beat anyone who tries

anything, won't he?" Ben asked with a grin.

I smirked. "Damn straight."

May protested a little more, but after MJ, Ben, and I kept up the

pleading, she eventually caved—not without making sure MJ had pepper

spray.

After breakfast, I took MJ up to my room and booted up Peter's old

Nintendo 64. I loaded up Super Smash Bros and taught her how to play.

Needless to say, she was a natural. Something about smashing me with a

giant hammer seemed to appeal to her.

We had lunch at home and then got ready to leave. Before I headed out,

Uncle Ben caught me at the door and slipped me a hundred-dollar bill. He

winked. "Make it a good night, champ."

I smiled. "Thanks, Uncle Ben."

We caught a cab to the train station and hopped on the first one into

Manhattan. MJ wouldn't stop going on about how the theatre troupe was

one of the best in the city and how I was going to be blown away. And I

believed her—in my old life, I'd been a serious theatre fan, though now

my interests had shifted somewhat.

We reached the city with time to spare, so I insisted we explore. Peter

had been around before, though not in detail, so I had a rough idea of

where to go.

We spent a long, easy afternoon in Central Park. MJ loved the greenery.

I loved her smile. Honestly, I think I might have been falling for this

girl. It had been what—a week? Damn you, Peter Parker. I just knew this

was somehow your fault.

We reached the theater just in time. MJ was buzzing with excitement, and

I shared it—a good Shakespearean production was always worth being

excited about.

The play lasted three hours, but it felt much shorter. The actors were

incredible—leagues above anything I'd seen before. Energetic, hypnotic,

alive in every line they delivered. But while MJ was absorbed in the

performance, my mind kept drifting.

The story was one of revenge. Hamlet discovers his father was killed by

his own uncle, and he sets out for vengeance. The premise was eerily

similar to Peter's own life—his uncle dies, and he hunts for the killer.

But there was a key difference. Hamlet kept postponing his revenge, and

in the end it cost him everything. He had a duty to his people—to remove

a man who would murder his own brother for the crown. He'd failed that

duty, and it led to the death of everyone he loved.

Peter, on the other hand, had taken on that responsibility. And he'd

grown because of it. Was what I was doing right? Was Spider-Man really

what I needed to be?

The question gnawed at me, but I pushed it aside and focused on the

stage. It never fully left, though.

And then it was over.

"That was so freaking cool!" MJ yelled, pumping her fists. A few of the

other patrons chuckled at her enthusiasm.

"Yeah, it was, Peepers," I nodded. "It was something else."

"Did you see how they acted? God—it was like they were actually going to

kill each other on stage! And Hamlet—oh, that guy. I felt like yelling,

'Do something, you ass! That's your mother!'"

I smiled. "Oh no. You've caught the bug."

MJ blinked. "Bug? What bug?"

"The theatre bug," I replied. "Symptoms include a love of theatre, a

passion for drama, and an uncontrollable desire to be under the

spotlight."

"Hey, that's mean," MJ pouted. "I just like it, okay."

"I know, I know. But I stand by what I said. Besides—I think you'd make

a great actress." We walked out into the city streets, the night still

buzzing with life around us.

"R-really?" MJ asked.

"Of course. Why—don't you think so?"

"No, I do. It's just… no one's ever said that to me before."

"Well, I'm glad I'm the first," I smiled, reaching out and taking her

hand in mine. She didn't hesitate—she squeezed back. "I'm serious, MJ.

You'd be an amazing actress."

MJ smiled. "Thanks, Peter. That… that really means a lot—"

KABOOM!

Time seemed to slow. Something inside me vibrated and my body moved on

pure instinct. I pulled MJ close, wrapping one arm around her, and leapt

to the side.

A massive slab of concrete flew past where we'd been standing a second

before. I landed hard, MJ held tight against me. We watched the chunk of

debris slam into the side of a building and shatter into fragments of

iron and concrete.

"What was that?!" MJ cried out.

"I—I don't—"

"GRRRR!"

An earth-shattering roar. My grip tightened around her as we turned and

saw Harlem burning. People were sprinting in every direction, fires

erupted along the street, cars were crushed into heaps, roads cracked

open. It had all happened in seconds.

And then I saw it.

A monster. Twenty feet tall, muscles like coiled steel, skin splitting

along the sides with bones jutting outward. It stood nearly naked,

wearing nothing but a pair of torn shorts. One look was all I needed.

"Abomination," I whispered.

I'd arrived too late—we were right in the middle of the final fight

between Hulk and the Abomination. This was the scene that would level

Harlem.

I looked down the road. People were screaming, running. And then, out of

a crater in the centre of the street, a green hand erupted from the

ground.

"No," I breathed. The hand pulled itself free, and a massive green

figure rose from the earth, growing in size. He ripped the tattered

remains of his shirt off his body.

"Hulk!" Abomination roared with delight. "Come face me!"

The two titans charged each other. Every step they took shook the ground

like a thunderclap. They collided in the centre of the street and the

shockwave shattered every window on the block.

I was swept off my feet, launched into the air—but I twisted and landed

on my feet, MJ held safely in my arms.

I looked up. Abomination had the upper hand, hurling Hulk through a fire

truck. I let out a breath of relief—they were taking their fight

elsewhere.

I looked down at MJ. She was staring at the fight in horror. "Are you

okay?"

"Y-yeah," she nodded. "W-what is that thing?!"

I searched Peter's memories. Yes—he had followed Bruce Banner's research

and knew about the Hulk. I could share that without raising suspicion.

"That's the Hulk," I pointed at the green monster, who had just snapped

a cop car in half to use as brass knuckles. "I think he's one of the

good guys."

"We need to get out of here!" MJ cried.

"Right," I nodded. The Hulk could handle himself. She was right—we

needed to be safe.

I set her down and we ran, joining the flood of people streaming away

from the destruction. But as we moved, I saw a man pinned under a

toppled streetlight. People streamed past him without a second glance.

His legs were bleeding. He was screaming for help.

I stopped.

I ran to the lamppost and grabbed it. "Hey, man—don't worry. I'll pull

you free. Okay?"

"Peter?" MJ called out in surprise.

The man nodded through the pain. I pulled with everything I had and felt

the post slowly rising—thank God for spider strength. But it was too

slow. I couldn't hold it for long—I wasn't used to this kind of strain.

I was about to let it drop when MJ sprinted over and hauled the man out

from under it. I dropped the pole with a heavy thud and a pant.

"Thank you," the man gasped.

"It's okay," MJ nodded, pulling him to the side, away from the fighting.

I turned around. More people were screaming. More were getting hurt by

debris flying from the battle between Hulk and Abomination. I watched a

military helicopter descend and open fire on the Abomination as he leapt

onto a rooftop and took off in search of the Hulk.

More people were going to get hurt. A lot more. And it was because of

those two.

"Peter? We need to go, Peter," MJ called out. But I could barely hear

her.

What would the real Peter Parker do? Would he fight? Or would he run?

No—he wouldn't run. Not when people were getting hurt. He would stay,

and he would help them, and if it came down to it, he would fight the

Hulk himself to make sure they didn't get hurt any more than they

already were. He was a hero. And… so was I.

I turned to MJ. "Get him to safety. Find somewhere safe and stay there.

People still need help, and I'm going to help them."

"What?! Peter, are you crazy?!" MJ cried. "There are monsters out

there!"

"And there are people getting hurt, MJ. I promise I'll be fine. I'll

call you as soon as I can." And without another word, I took off.

"Peter!" she shouted behind me. But I was already gone.

I sprinted down the street and spotted a second-hand clothing store with

a shattered front window. I ducked inside and scanned the racks. I

needed a costume.

I grabbed a red hoodie that fit, a pair of blue yoga pants from the

women's section, a ski mask, and a pair of gloves.

I changed in the fitting room, fast. I reached into my back pockets

and—sure enough—my web shooters were there. I slipped them on over the

gloves and fired a test web line. Strong and quick. Good.

I stuffed my regular clothes into a school bag, zipped it up, and

slapped a twenty on the counter. I started for the door—then stopped.

There were cameras outside. If someone got curious, they could trace me

back to my real identity. I needed to be careful. Paranoid, even.

I spotted an open window near the ceiling, leading out into the alley. I

climbed the wall, thankfully finding that my wall-crawling worked even

through gloves and sneakers.

I crawled out into the alley and pressed the bag against the wall,

covering it in webs to hold it in place until I could come back for it.

An explosion drew my attention. I looked up to see the military

helicopter crashing down a few blocks away. It was now or never.

I stretched out one hand and fired a web line into the corner of a

building. My stomach filled with butterflies—nervousness and dread

battling each other.

I pushed off the wall and held on tight, swinging like a pendulum across

the alley and out into the open street.

My stomach lurched as I sailed over the destroyed road and landed on the

roof of the building on the other side. I stuck the landing and blinked,

staring at my hands, then back the way I'd come.

'Yeah… this is freaking awesome.' I grinned and took off running. I

jumped off the edge of the roof, fired another web line, and swung from

street to street towards the sounds of destruction. I landed on a

rooftop and looked down.

The helicopter was still in one piece, thankfully. The battlefield was a

broken stretch of city, barren except for a few barrel fires. And

standing on top of the helicopter was Abomination, grinning down at the

Hulk, who looked more annoyed than angry.

Abomination charged, hurling Hulk into a broken wall and pounding him. I

looked at the chopper as soldiers poured out, a female civilian among

them. 'Betty Ross,' I realised.

Fuel was pouring from the engines. Sparks flew everywhere. It was only a

matter of time before the whole thing went up—and even the Hulk seemed

to realise it, trying to break free, but Abomination kept him pinned

against the wall.

'Looks like it's my turn.' I gulped, jumped off the roof, and landed in

a roll.

"Hey, everyone! Fancy seeing you here," I called out.

The soldiers stared at me like I'd lost my mind.

"Get out of here—it's going to blow!" Betty warned me. Nice lady.

"Not if I have anything to say about it," I turned to the leaking fuel

tank and fired web line after web line. I wrapped the strands around the

tank until it was completely covered, sealing the leak.

Crisis averted. The fuel already on the ground soaked into the earth,

harmless.

I turned to the Hulk. "Hey, big guy!" The monster looked at me. "I got

this. Kick his ass!"

Hulk grinned. He turned to Abomination and headbutted him so hard the

crack echoed across the block. Abomination grabbed his nose in pain, and

the two of them went at it again—this time with Hulk fully focused.

I turned back to the soldiers still trapped in the chopper. I jumped in

and started pulling them out one by one, handing the unconscious and

injured to those who could still walk. A few civilians rushed in to

help, dragging soldiers away from the wreckage.

Betty ran up to me as I pulled out the last injured soldier. "You have

to help him!"

I looked up and saw the Hulk being battered with a wrecking ball that

Abomination had fashioned into a flail. He knocked Hulk sideways, then

turned to us, narrowing his eyes at the retreating soldiers.

"General," he growled, raising his chains.

And I moved.

"No! Don't!" I heard General Thunderbolt Ross yell out.

My head buzzed—the warning. I jumped just as Abomination hurled his

chains at me. I landed in a roll and charged straight at him. I didn't

know exactly how strong Peter was. But it should be enough.

I ducked under his swings, slipped past his guard, drew one arm back,

and with everything I had, drove a punch into his gut.

Abomination's eyes went wide as his body lifted off the ground for a few

seconds. I felt my web shooter crack from the force. It exploded into a

tangle of webs, covering my arm and his torso.

'Shit.' I was stuck to him. Abomination landed on his feet and looked

down at me, sneering.

My spider sense was screaming. But I couldn't move away. He reached for

me and I leapt over his gigantic arm. The webs stretched—good, I had

leverage. I ducked under his other arm, wrapping both up with my web,

circling them tighter and tighter before grabbing my hoodie sleeve and

tearing it off, freeing myself from the web line.

I jumped away as Abomination struggled to break free. His arms were

wound tight against his chest. He pulled hard—I could see the lines

starting to give—but it was taking all his effort. I needed to put him

down.

I couldn't knock him unconscious. That was the Hulk's job. I needed to

be smart about this. He had to have a weak point. After all, he was

only… human.

He needed to breathe.

I charged again, leapt onto his chest, and aimed my remaining web

shooter at his nostrils. They were massive. If I wanted to make sure he

couldn't pull them off, I had to lodge them somewhere he couldn't reach.

I fired two web lines into his nostrils, sealing his nasal passage.

Abomination's eyes went wide with horror as he realised what I was

doing. He thrashed harder, the web restraints snapping. I fired one last

web line into his mouth, covering it completely.

I leapt away just as he broke free of the arm restraints. I landed far

back and watched as he clawed at the webs covering his airways. But his

fingers were too big—they couldn't fit. He tried to tear at the ones in

his mouth, but I'd lodged them deep. He couldn't even get a grip.

I panted, watching as he scratched at his neck, trying desperately to

breathe. He swayed—and then he dropped, crashing to the ground with a

massive thud.

I stood there, breathing hard. I hadn't even realised I'd been panting.

I looked around. Police had gathered, guns trained on the unconscious

monster. The Hulk stood to one side, looking at me and then down at

Abomination.

He growled, then let out an earth-shattering roar that made everyone

flinch. Betty Ross, however, didn't move. She walked straight up to him.

Thunderbolt ordered his men to stand down. Even the police held their

fire.

"Bruce," Betty whispered, tears running down her face.

Hulk looked down at her. He tried to wipe her tears away, but found he

couldn't. "Betty," he rumbled. A spotlight swung onto him from a news

helicopter circling overhead.

Hulk growled. He turned and disappeared into the night, the helicopter

in pursuit. Within seconds, he was gone.

Everyone turned to look at me.

"What's your name, son?" Thunderbolt asked as he approached.

"Me? I'm…" I hesitated. Then: "I'm Spider-Man."

"Spider-Man? What kind of name is that?"

"The kind I chose."

"Are you planning on playing dress up?" he asked, an eyebrow raised.

"Yup."

He clearly hadn't expected me to admit to that. He looked to his men,

who were all waiting for orders. He nodded toward Abomination. "Secure

him." Then he turned back to me. "Well, whatever your name is—thank you.

I owe you a debt. If you hadn't shown up when you did, those two would

have destroyed the city."

I shrugged. "I don't know. The green guy looked like he had it handled."

"Trust me, son. He didn't," Ross snorted. "It's people like you and me

who keep others safe. You did your country a great service today. Thank

you. If there's anything I can do for you, just ask."

I blinked. That was unexpected. "Ah… thanks. I guess." I looked

around—people were snapping photos. I needed to disappear. Now.

"Anyway—bye!" I turned, sprinted to a lamppost, jumped, stuck to the

top, fired a web line, and swung away into the night.

"Sir, should we follow him?" a soldier asked Ross.

"No. Let him go. He's not our enemy," Thunderbolt ordered, then turned

to his daughter and sighed. Tonight was going to be a long one.

I landed in the alley with my bag still stuck to the wall. I peeled it

free and quick

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