I’ll try and put all stories in alphabetical order. I write all my readers as black but you can imagine them however you want to🤎 18+ MDNI
Peter Parker T.H
Under the mask —Part 1 , 2 , 3,
Not today Justin
Sweet Seals For You, Always
noise dept.
Claire Keane

roma★
Misplaced Lens Cap
hello vonnie
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
$LAYYYTER

almost home
Keni

Love Begins
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

tannertan36
i don't do bad sauce passes
taylor price

Janaina Medeiros
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

seen from India
seen from Malaysia

seen from Belgium

seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from Maldives
seen from Singapore

seen from India
seen from Netherlands

seen from Singapore
seen from Austria

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Australia

seen from Lithuania

seen from Taiwan
@lostinreads
I’ll try and put all stories in alphabetical order. I write all my readers as black but you can imagine them however you want to🤎 18+ MDNI
Peter Parker T.H
Under the mask —Part 1 , 2 , 3,

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If I create a Beau Maxwell short series would that be something y’all interested in? UPDATE: if so would you guys want it to be a Beaux actual character or a Beau x Reader?
ᥫ᭡. Under the Mask - P.P
Black!F!Reader x College Peter Parker
Synopsis- After the world forgets who Spider-Man really is, you accidentally discover the truth and suddenly, you can't get him out of your head. When you realize the boy behind the mask walks the same college halls as you, curiosity turns into something deeper. Because the hero everyone sees is only half the story, and the guy underneath the mask might be even harder to forget. 18+MDNI
A/N: you guys don't know how excited I am for my man to be back on my screen. It's been so long. I had this story in the drafts for almost a year I think now and I thought this would be the perfect time to post it. Peter and the reader are Seniors in colleg so they're 21-22 years of age. This is Part 3 of this series so if you haven't go read part 1 and 2! Originally this was suppose to be one part but the chapter was too long so I had to split it into 2! So don't forget to go read part 2!
Warning: mild language, alcohol mention, grief mention, light romantic tension, brief mention of danger.
Masterlist : Part 1 Part 2 Part 3
────────── 🕷️ ──────────
Tuesday comes way too slow and way too fast at the same time.
By the time evening rolls around, your room is cleaner than it’s ever been in its entire life.
Not because you care.
Obviously.
But if Peter Parker, secretly Spider-Man, is going to be in your room, then maybe your random pile of unfolded laundry didn’t need to be in his direct line of sight.
That’s all.
Totally normal.
You’ve changed into something comfortable, your knotless braids—which you got done the Sunday prior—falling over your shoulders while the scarf tied around your edges keeps the front sleek and neat. The apartment smells faintly like vanilla and laundry detergent, and somewhere in the distance you can hear Marie laughing at something loud enough to qualify as a public disturbance.
Tiff is in her room on FaceTime, and every few minutes you hear bits of Jamaican patois and cackling through the wall.
You’re sitting on the edge of your bed pretending to scroll through your phone when really you’ve reread Peter’s text three times.
Peter :)
A smiley face.
A smiley face.
Men really do the bare minimum and suddenly it’s cinema.
You texted him your address earlier when he asked, but other than that there’s been no messages between you two.
You hate this.
Just then your phone buzzes.
Peter: Here :)
Your stomach immediately flips.
You stand up too fast, nearly tripping over your own rug in the process.
“Jesus,” you mutter, catching yourself before fixing your face like you haven’t just been acting insane for the last ten minutes.
Then you head to the front door.
When you open it, Peter is standing there holding his backpack strap with one hand and a notebook tucked under the other arm.
And wow.
He looks good.
Stupidly good.
He’s in a dark hoodie and sweats, hair slightly messy, glasses sitting low enough on his nose to make your life harder than necessary.
There’s something about how soft he looks outside the suit that catches you off guard all over again.
Because this is him.
This is the boy under the mask.
And for one split second, he just looks at you too.
Then his eyes flick down and back up again like he’s trying not to stare.
Because you look good too.
Really, really good.
And Peter’s trying very hard not to let that short-circuit his entire nervous system on your doorstep.
“Hey,” he says.
“Hey.”
He lifts the notebook slightly. “I brought… geometry.”
You grin. “Hot.”
A small, breathy laugh slips out of him.
You step aside. “Come in.”
He walks in carefully, like he’s not sure how much space he’s allowed to take up, and his eyes flick around the apartment in quick little glances.
It’s warm. Lived in. Cozy.
There’s a throw blanket over the couch, candles on the TV stand, shoes by the door, a half-empty bottle of juice on the coffee table.
It feels homey in a way his place hasn’t in a long time.
The thought hits him unexpectedly hard.
You shut the door behind him. “My roommates are here, but they’re mostly in their rooms.”
He nods. “Okay.”
You motion toward the hallway. “My room’s this way.”
He follows you down the short hall, and when you push your bedroom door open, he pauses for half a second in the doorway.
Your room is very you.
Soft lighting. A warm-toned lamp glowing in the corner. A fluffy throw blanket folded neatly at the foot of the bed. Candles, books, and a little jewelry tray scattered across your dresser. A collage wall above your desk. Lotions and glosses lined up with suspicious precision.
It’s girly without trying too hard.
Cozy.
Pretty.
You.
Peter’s mouth parts slightly before he can stop it.
“What?” you ask, turning back.
He shakes his head quickly. “Nothing. It’s just…”
You raise a brow.
“…your room is really nice.”
The compliment catches you a little off guard.
Your smile softens. “Thank you, I tried.”
He gives a small shrug, suddenly shy again. “It feels… cozy.”
Something about the way he says it makes your chest warm.
You point to the carpet. “We’re studying on the floor though. Outside clothes don’t go on my bed.”
Peter nods immediately. “That’s fine by me.”
He sets his stuff down while you grab your notebook and textbook.
You both settle onto the carpet with your backs near the side of your bed, notebooks spread out between you, calculator tossed beside your thigh.
And for a little while, it really is just studying.
Peter is… annoyingly good at this.
Not in a cocky way.
Just in that deeply offensive smart-person way where he explains something once and suddenly it makes sense.
He doesn’t make you feel dumb.
Doesn’t rush.
Doesn’t get frustrated when you ask him to repeat something.
He just patiently walks you through angle relationships and proofs and whatever geometric witchcraft Mr. Banner is trying to put you through.
“Okay,” Peter says, tapping your notebook with the eraser end of his pencil. “So if these two are supplementary…”
“They equal one-eighty,” you say.
“Good. And if this angle is sixty-eight…”
“Then the other one is…” You squint at the page. “One-twelve?”
He looks at you for a beat.
Then smiles.
“Yeah.”
The praise hits harder than it should.
You grin despite yourself. “Okayyy.”
He laughs softly. “You got it.”
And that’s the problem.
Because the more relaxed he gets while teaching, the harder it is to ignore the fact that he’s very, very attractive.
Every once in a while, he’ll push his glasses up with one finger. His curls fall into his eyes, and he absently brushes them back. Or he leans over your notebook to point something out, his body heat radiating so close it makes your brain completely leave your body.
You’re trying to focus.
You really are.
But every few minutes you catch yourself stealing little glances at him.
The line of his jaw.
The shape of his hands.
The soft concentration on his face when he’s reading over your notes.
And underneath all of that, there’s still this giant question sitting in your chest.
You want to ask him things.
About that night.
About him.
About who he is when he’s not in the suit.
But he still feels a little guarded. Not cold, not rude, just… careful. Like there are a thousand locked doors in him and he’s only cracked one open by accident.
So you start light.
You twirl your pencil between your fingers, pretending to look down at your notes. “So…”
Peter glances up. “Mm?”
“Were you born here?”
His brows lift slightly, like he wasn’t expecting that. “Uh. Yeah. Queens.”
You smile. “Okay, city boy.”
He gives you a tiny grin. “I guess.”
“How old are you?”
He blinks once. “Twenty-two.”
“Wait, really?”
“Yeah.”
“You’re my age?”
“How old are you?”
“Twenty-two.”
“Then seems like it.”
Even though he’s being sarcastic, there’s a small grin on his lips that gives him away, and you lightly bump his shoulder.
The atmosphere shifts a little after that. Easier. Softer.
So you test the waters a little more.
“What about your family?” you ask, keeping your tone casual.
And immediately, you feel him tense.
Not a lot.
Just enough.
You almost regret asking.
But after a second, he answers.
“My parents died when I was little.”
Your heart sinks.
“Oh,” you say quietly. “I’m sorry.”
He shrugs in that way people do when they’ve had to say something painful enough times that it starts sounding rehearsed. “It’s okay.”
No, it’s not, you think immediately.
But you don’t say that.
Instead, softer, “What happened?”
“Plane crash.”
Your chest tightens.
Damn.
You sit with that for a second, then ask gently, “So did any of your other family take you in?”
He nods. “Yeah. My Aunt May took me in.”
The name lands oddly.
Familiar.
You blink. “May?”
“Yeah.”
You stare at him.
Then your eyes widen.
“Wait.”
Peter looks up.
“May Parker?”
That gets his full attention.
“…Yeah,” he says slowly. “Why?”
You sit up straighter. “Oh my God.”
He blinks. “What?”
“I knew her.”
Now it’s his turn to stare.
“What?”
“I mean—not like knew knew her,” you say quickly. “But I knew of her. In high school, I used to volunteer at this outreach center downtown. They did food drives and winter coat donations and hygiene kits and stuff for homeless folks and low-income families.”
Peter’s expression changes immediately.
Something softer. Sharper. More attentive.
You continue, “She used to be there all the time. Like all the time. Helping with sign-ins, serving food, organizing donations, talking to everybody like she’d known them forever.”
A smile tugs at your mouth without you meaning it to.
“She was so sweet,” you say. “Like… one of those people that just had light in them, you know? She remembered people’s names. She’d ask how school was going. She always smelled like peppermint and hand lotion.”
Peter goes completely still.
And for a second, he can’t say anything at all.
Because hearing someone else talk about May like that—
Like they saw what he saw.
Like they understood what she was.
It hits somewhere too deep.
You glance at him, your voice softening. “I was really sad when I heard she passed.”
His throat moves.
“Yeah,” he says quietly. “Me too.”
The room goes quiet for a second.
Not awkward.
Just… full.
Then you tilt your head. “That’s crazy though. I didn’t know she had a nephew.”
And the second the words leave your mouth, something flickers across Peter’s face.
Small.
Sharp.
Gone almost immediately.
Because of course you didn’t know.
Nobody does.
Nobody remembers that May had a nephew because in the version of the world everyone else lives in now, Peter Parker has been quietly erased from all the places he used to belong.
And hearing it from you still stings more than he expects.
You notice the strange little shift in him, but before you can overthink it, you ask lightly, almost too casually:
“Did she know?”
He looks at you.
You hold his gaze.
“That you were Spider-Man.”
For a second, he says nothing.
Long enough that you start thinking maybe you crossed a line.
Long enough that you think he might just shut down completely.
Then finally, very quietly:
“Yeah.”
Something in your chest twists.
Because the way he says it tells you more than the word itself.
You nod slowly. “Okay.”
You don’t push, scared you might scare him off if you do.
After a minute, you nudge your notebook toward him. “Okay. Explain number seven to me before I forget everything you just taught me.”
He sighs in relief, grateful for the shift.
“Yes, ma’am.”
And the studying continues.
Only now it’s easier.
The conversation comes in little pieces between equations and diagrams.
You ask if he has siblings. He says no.
You ask if he has a girlfriend.
He says no.
To your surprise, he asks questions about yourself too, and you gladly answer.
You point your pencil at him. “Do you have friends at least, or are you just mysterious and weird full-time?”
He actually laughs at that.
“I have… friends,” he says slowly, which causes you to snort.
“Yeah, because that sounded real convincing.”
Little by little, you can feel it happening.
He loosens a little.
Not completely.
But he does.
And you like it.
There’s something so unexpectedly soft about him.
Sweet in a way that doesn’t feel performative.
Awkward without trying to be charming.
Guarded, but kind.
Like every careful little piece of him has still somehow managed not to harden.
Which, honestly?
Might be the most dangerous thing about him.
A knock hits your half-open door.
Then Marie appears without waiting for permission, pushing inside with all the grace of a woman who’s never respected boundaries in her life.
“Hey, Y/N, do you wanna—”
She stops mid-sentence when she sees the scene before her.
Her eyes flick from you.
To Peter.
To the open notebooks on the floor.
Then back to you.
One perfectly arched brow rises.
Uh oh.
You know that look.
You immediately point at the geometry book like a defense attorney presenting evidence. “Don’t start.”
Marie folds her arms, lips twitching. “I didn’t say nothin’.”
“You were about to.”
Peter, poor thing, looks like he wants the carpet to swallow him whole.
You sigh. “Marie, this is Peter Parker. He’s tutoring me. Peter, this is Marie Diaz.”
Marie’s eyes flick over him in a quick once-over, subtle enough that he might not catch it, but you do.
Approval flashes through them.
Then she smiles, all charm and trouble.
“Peter Parker,” she says, and for some reason the way she says it makes you want to laugh. “Nice to meet you.”
Peter looks like he has no idea what to do with the fact that Marie just said his full government name like she’s announcing him at a scholarship banquet.
He gives her a small, polite nod. “Nice to meet you too.”
Marie glances between the two of you, then back at you with entirely too much knowing in her face. “So. Since y’all are apparently having a very scholarly little evening in here, I was gonna ask if you wanted to order pizza.”
Your eyes light up immediately. “Yes.”
“See, great minds think alike.” She says, then turns to Peter. “What about you, Peter Parker?”
Peter shifts a little where he’s sitting, one hand resting on his notebook. “Oh, no, I’m good. Thank you though.”
Marie narrows her eyes. “You sure?”
“Yeah,” he says quickly. “I don’t wanna intrude.”
And right on cue, like his body personally hates him, his stomach growls.
Loud.
Not subtle.
Peter freezes.
Silence.
Then the color rushes into his face so fast it’s honestly kind of impressive.
You bite your lip.
Marie stares at him for one beat.
Then you crack first, a little laugh slipping out before you can stop it.
Peter drops his head into one hand. “Oh my God.”
That makes you laugh harder.
And then Marie starts cackling too, one hand over her chest. “Baby, your stomach just spoke for you.”
Peter lets out a mortified little laugh into his palm, shoulders hunching as he shakes his head. “Okay, wow.”
Marie grins wickedly. “So that was a yes, then.”
He peeks up, still red. “I mean… if that’s okay.”
“It’s pizza, not a kidney,” Marie says. “You’re fine.”
She pulls her phone out and looks at both of you. “Large pepperoni with bacon?”
You nod immediately. “Perfect.”
Peter agrees. “Yeah. That sounds really good.”
Marie points at him before turning to walk away. “See? Honesty sets you free, Peter Parker.”
He laughs again, quieter this time, and something about the sound makes your chest go warm and stupid.
The second she’s gone, you turn back toward Peter, who still looks like he wants to evaporate.
You grin. “Your stomach really sold you out.”
He groans softly and rubs his forehead. “I know. That was actually evil.”
“I’m crying,” you say, even though you’re not. “Like, perfect timing much?”
He gives you a helpless look. “Apparently not.”
You smile, softer now. “It’s okay. I would’ve judged you more if you turned down pizza for real.”
“That’s fair,” he says, a little smile pulling at his mouth. “That would’ve been suspicious behavior.”
“Exactly.”
The awkwardness melts again as you both settle back over the notebook.
Peter taps the page with his pencil. “Okay. So before my dignity was publicly executed, we were on number nine.”
You snort. “Rest in peace.”
He points at the diagram. “Focus.”
You lean in beside him, close enough that your shoulders brush lightly. “I am focused.”
“You’re literally not.”
“I’m emotionally focused.”
He shakes his head, smiling under his breath. “That’s not a real thing.”
“It indeed is.”
He glances at you for half a second too long, amusement sitting warm in his brown eyes, and then looks back down.
“So,” he says, clearing his throat a little, “if angle A and angle B are congruent…”
You work through a few more problems after that, and somewhere between proofs and your dramatic complaints about geometry being a hate crime, the conversation keeps slipping into easier places.
He tells you he likes science more than math, which feels deeply offensive considering he’s good at both.
At one point, when you get an answer right on your own without help, you throw your hands up. “Oh, I ate that.”
Peter smiles at you, genuinely pleased. “You did. Good job.”
And there it is again.
That stupid warm feeling.
You try to ignore it.
“Okay,” you say, writing the answer down. “So what do you do when you’re not terrifying the streets of New York in spandex?”
He nearly chokes on his own breath. “That is not what I do.”
You grin. “That is exactly what you do.”
“I do other things.”
“Like?”
He shrugs. “School. Work. Lab stuff.”
“Lab stuff,” you repeat. “That sounded sexy and nerdy.”
He gives you a look over the rim of his glasses. “I don’t think those two words usually go together.”
“They do for you.”
The second the words leave your mouth, you instantly wish you could take them back.
For one tiny second, neither of you says anything.
Then you point aggressively at the notebook. “Anyway. Is this one alternate interior or corresponding?”
Peter blinks once, then looks down. “Alternate interior.”
“Thank you.”
“Mm-hm.”
His ears are pink again.
You do not mention it because you are a kind and gracious woman.
Mostly because if you do, he might combust.
About fifteen minutes later, there’s a knock at the front door and Marie yelling from somewhere in the apartment, “Pizza’s here!”
You and Peter both look up.
You set your pencil down. “Saved by processed meat.”
He laughs and pushes himself to his feet, then reaches down automatically to help you up.
You take his hand.
Warm.
Big.
Your stomach flips so suddenly it’s almost rude.
Peter seems to feel it too, because his fingers tighten for the briefest second before he lets go.
Neither of you says anything about it.
You just head for the kitchen together like two people pretending your nervous systems are not doing cartwheels.
The kitchen smells amazing by the time you get there, all hot cheese and grease and garlic. Marie is already setting the box on the counter, and Tiff is there too now, leaning against the fridge with a drink in hand.
She looks up as you walk in with Peter and immediately clocks the vibe in about half a second.
Her eyes flick to you.
Then to him.
Then back to you.
Oh, brother.
You give her the tiniest warning look possible.
She bites the inside of her cheek to stop from smiling.
“Peter, right?” she says instead, easy and casual.
Peter nods. “Yeah.”
You reach for a plate. “Peter, this is my other best friend, Tiff.”
“Nice to meet you,” he says.
“Likewise,” Tiff says, and unlike Marie, she actually behaves like she was raised with some sense.
She opens the pizza box with the reverence of a woman unveiling treasure. “So, Peter Parker, how long you been a genius?”
You close your eyes. “Marie.”
“What?” she says innocently, passing out paper plates. “I’m being hospitable.”
“You’re being nosy.”
“I can be two things.”
Peter, for reasons beyond your understanding, looks amused instead of alarmed.
“I’m not a genius.”
Marie stares at him. “Baby, you voluntarily tutor geometry. That’s sick.”
Tiff mutters, “Marie, leave that man alone.”
“I’m not bothering him,” Marie says. “He likes me.”
Peter, mid-reach for a slice, glances at Marie and says with a small smile, “I do, actually.”
Marie puts a hand on her chest. “See? Manners. Home training. I knew it.”
You groan and grab two slices from the box.
Tiff rolls her eyes and pushes off the fridge. “Please don’t gas her up. She’s already unbearable.”
Marie ignores that. “So where you from?”
“Queens,” Peter says.
“Okayyy,” Marie says. “That makes sense.”
Peter looks amused. “Does it?”
“Yeah. You’ve got a Queens face.”
He blinks. “I have no idea what that means.”
You giggle mid-bite into your pizza.
Tiff points at Marie. “See, this is exactly why I said stop.”
Marie snaps her fingers. “Wait, what’s your major?”
Peter swallows and answers a little more confidently this time. “Biophysics.”
Marie goes dead still. “That is not a real word.”
Peter laughs. “It is.”
“No, because that sounds like a degree you make up on a government form.”
“It’s real,” he says, smiling now.
Tiff shakes her head. “Marie, let him eat before you interview him for office.”
“I’m just trying to get to know our guest.”
“Our guest would like to eat his damn pizza,” Tiff says.
Peter actually laughs at that, shoulders loosening again, and the sound makes you glance at him without meaning to.
He catches you.
You both look away.
Immediately.
Yeah.
Normal.
Very normal.
Somehow, after that, the conversation evens out.
You all eat standing around the kitchen island, talking about classes and professors and the campus library and the fact that the laundry room in your building is probably sent from hell.
Peter gets comfortable by the minute.
He smiles more.
Answers quicker.
Even teases back a little when Marie dramatically tells him she’d fail geometry on principle.
“I believe in you,” he says.
She narrows her eyes. “Don’t lie to me in my own kitchen.”
You laugh so hard you nearly drop your plate.
By the time the pizza’s half gone and the mood settles into something warm and easy, it feels weirdly natural having him there.
Like he fits more easily than either of you probably expected.
Eventually, he checks the time on his phone and straightens a little. “I should probably head out.”
And just like that, something in your chest drops a tiny bit.
“Oh,” you say, trying to sound normal. “Yeah. Okay.”
Marie and Tiff both suddenly become way too interested in throwing away their napkins.
Traitors.
Peter thanks you guys for the pizza and Tiff for not letting Marie interrogate him to death, which earns another laugh from both of them.
Then he looks at you.
That same quiet little look from before.
Soft. Careful. A little shy.
After he grabs his things from your room, you walk him to the front door and pull it open. Tiff and Marie stay suspiciously planted in the kitchen, pretending not to watch.
Peter adjusts his backpack strap again, and for a second you just stand there looking at each other in the warm apartment light.
“Thanks for helping me,” you say quietly.
His expression softens. “You’re welcome.”
“And for not letting me fail spectacularly.”
“You’re still doing the work,” he says. “I’m just making sure you’re going in the right direction.”
“Still.” You smile. “Thank you, Peter.”
He looks at you for a beat, and the way his name sits in the silence between you feels bigger than it should.
“Goodnight,” he says then.
“Goodnight.”
He hesitates.
Then gives you that same tiny wave again.
It’s so cute it almost makes you angry.
You smile before you can stop yourself. “Bye.”
“Bye.”
He turns and heads down the hall, and you stay in the doorway a second longer than necessary, watching until he disappears around the corner.
The moment you shut the door, Marie is already there.
“Hoooooot.”
You whip around. “Marie!”
She presses both hands to her chest, dramatic as ever. “I’m sorry, but Peter Parker is fine.”
From the kitchen, Tiff calls, “She not even lying.”
You stare at both of them in disbelief. “Y’all are so embarrassing.”
Marie follows you back into the apartment, grinning like the devil. “No, because the glasses? The shoulders? The voice? Girl!”
Tiff leans on the counter, nodding. “And he was sweet. That’s the dangerous part.”
Marie points at her. “Exactly. Fine and nice? That’s how they get you.”
You roll your eyes so hard you nearly see your past life. “He is literally just helping me study.”
Both of them stare at you.
You cross your arms. “That’s it.”
Marie bursts out laughing.
Tiff snorts. “Okay.”
“I’m serious.”
“Mm-hm,” Marie says.
You grab the last slice of pizza out of spite. “Y’all are annoying.”
“And you like him,” Marie sings.
“I do not!”
Tiff raises a brow. “Then why you smiling like that?”
Your hand flies to your face.
You are smiling.
Damn.
Marie screams. “OH MY GOD.”
“Shut up!” you yell, lunging for her.
She dodges you with a shriek and takes off down the apartment, socks sliding on the floor.
You chase her immediately.
Tiff is laughing so hard she has to grab the counter, and then somehow she gets dragged in too when Marie ducks behind her like a human shield.
“Don’t use me!” Tiff cries, laughing.
“You’re part of this now!” Marie yells back.
The next thing you know, all three of you are in the living room, fighting each other with throw pillows and laughing like idiots while somebody almost knocks over the lamp.
By the time you all finally collapse onto the couch in a breathless heap, your cheeks hurt from smiling.
Marie nudges your shoulder. “Still saying it’s just tutoring?”
“Bitch. Fuck you.” You laugh and grab a pillow to smack her in the face with it.
She yelps.
Tiff starts laughing again.
ᥫ᭡. Under the Mask - P.P
Black!F!Reader x College Peter Parker
Synopsis— After the world forgets who Spider-Man really is, you accidentally discover the truth and suddenly, you can't get him out of your head. When you realize the boy behind the mask walks the same college halls as you, curiosity turns into something deeper. Because the hero everyone sees is only half the story, and the guy underneath the mask might be even harder to forget. 18+MDNI
A/N: you guys don't know how excited I am for my man to be back on my screen. It's been so long. I had this story in the drafts for almost a year I think now and I thought this would be the perfect time to post it. Peter and the reader are Seniors in colleg so they're 21-22 years of age. This is Part 2 of this series so if you haven’t go read part 1! Originally this was suppose to be one part but the chapter was too long so I had to split it into 2! So don’t forget to go read part 3!
Warning: mild language, alcohol mention, grief mention, light romantic tension, brief mention of danger
Masterlist: Part 1 Part 2 Part 3
────────── 🕷️ ──────────
By Monday, you’ve come to one very annoying conclusion:
You are, unfortunately, still thinking about Spider-Man.
Not in a casual oh wow, that was crazy kind of way either.
No. Your brain has chosen to replay the entire alley interaction like it’s your personal favorite scene in a movie you didn’t ask to rent.
The way he looked at you.
The way his hand felt at your waist.
The way his voice dipped low and rough when he spoke.
And worst of all?
His face.
Jesus.
You stab at your pasta salad with your plastic fork like it personally offended you.
The student commons around you is loud. Not an actual cafeteria, but close enough. Too many conversations layered over one another. Chairs scraping. Somebody laughing way too hard in the corner. The smell of overpriced coffee and greasy fries hangs in the air while people drift in and out between classes like little sleep-deprived ants.
Across from you, Tiff is halfway through a smoothie bowl and Ziair is peeling the label off a Gatorade bottle with the concentration of a man defusing a bomb.
And you?
You’re sitting there with your fork hovering in the air while your brain is somewhere in a dark alley two nights ago.
You wonder if you’ll ever see him again.
If he remembers you.
If he thinks about you too.
Which is ridiculous.
Actually ridiculous.
Because why would Spider-Man be thinking about you when he’s probably out there dodging bullets and saving babies from burning buildings and whatever else masked men do?
Still…
The memory of his eyes makes your stomach flip.
Brown. Warm. A little panicked.
Pretty.
Like… disrespectfully pretty.
“Hello?”
Nothing.
“Earth to Miss Delulu?”
Still nothing.
Then suddenly a french fry hits your shoulder.
You blink and look up.
Tiff is staring at you like you’ve just astral projected in public. “Girl, are you okay? You been staring at that noodle for the past ten minutes.”
Ziair leans forward, squinting at you suspiciously. “Nah, for real. I was finna check your pulse.”
You sit up straighter, immediately trying to play it off. “I’m fine.”
Tiff snorts. “That was not a believable fine.”
“It was a very believable fine.”
“No,” Ziair says, taking a sip of his drink, “that was one of them ‘I’m mentally in a music video montage while SZA playin’ in the background’ fines.”
You roll your eyes and finally take a bite of your food. “Y’all are annoying.”
“Maybe,” Tiff says, spoon pointed at you like a weapon. “But not wrong.”
“I’m just tired.”
Ziair cracks his neck with a dramatic groan. “Nah, tired is real though. My head was trying to kill me all Saturday morning.”
That gets your attention just enough to pull you back into the conversation. “That’s because you thought it was a great idea to mix tequila and vodka together the night before.”
He glares at you. “First of all, I was being adventurous.”
“You were being stupid,” Tiff mutters.
He ignores her. “Second of all, I told myself I’m never drinking again.”
You and Tiff both look at him flatly.
He pauses.
Then shrugs. “Until maybe next Friday.”
Tiff bursts out laughing. “I knew you was full of shit.”
“I’m serious!” he protests. “I was on the bathroom floor Saturday morning fighting for my life. I looked up at God and saw my ancestors.”
You choke on a laugh. “Not your ancestors.”
“Yes!” he says, slapping a hand to his chest. “My granny was lookin’ down at me disappointed as hell. I heard her in my spirit clear as day.”
He drops his voice, slipping into his best old-lady impression. “‘Ziair Darnell Johnson, if you don’t get yo ass off that cold tile floor and drink some water.’”
Tiff is crying laughing now, nearly spilling her bowl. “Why would she say it exactly like that?”
“Because that’s how she talk!”
You laugh too, finally, the sound spilling out easier than it has all day.
Ziair sits back in his chair with fake dignity. “All I’m saying is, the devil was at that party.”
“The devil was in your shot count,” you say.
“And Marie’s decisions,” Tiff adds.
That makes all three of you cackle.
“Speaking of,” Ziair says, shaking his head, “I still cannot believe she left with vampire boy.”
You snort. “After all that talk about Spider-Man too.”
Tiff points at you immediately. “Exactly!”
“See?” Ziair says. “Women don’t stand on business anymore.”
“Please shut up,” Tiff says, kicking his shin under the table.
He yelps. “Ow! Violence! In a place of education?”
That earns him a fry straight to the face.
The conversation rolls on from there, easy and stupid and familiar.
You talk about classes. About the chemistry quiz Tiff swears was “written for us to fail.” And about the discussion post Ziair forgot to submit because he “thought he submitted it in his heart.”
You keep up. You laugh when you’re supposed to. You tease back.
But even while you’re in it, part of you is still elsewhere.
Still hearing that voice.
Still seeing his face.
And still wondering what his real name is.
The warning bell for the end of free period goes off, pulling you from your thoughts again.
Students all around you begin gathering their things, tossing out food, stuffing laptops into backpacks.
Ziair stands first, slinging his bag over one shoulder. “Aight, my suffering in sociology awaits.”
Tiff gives him a mock salute. “Thoughts and prayers.”
He points at you on his way out. “Whatever man you were daydreaming about half the period better be worth it.”
Your head jerks up. “Nobody—”
But he’s already laughing and walking away.
“Bye, traitor!” you call after him.
He throws a peace sign over his shoulder without looking back.
You and Tiff start gathering your own stuff, and for a second, you think maybe—maybe—you can escape this conversation.
You should know better.
The second Ziair disappears into the crowd, Tiff turns back to you with the exact expression of a woman who smells mess.
“Oh, absolutely not.”
You freeze mid-zip. “What?”
She folds her arms. “What is it?”
“Nothing.”
She stares at you.
You stare back.
She keeps staring, eyes narrowing now.
You break first.
“Tiff…”
“Mm-hm.”
You glance around the commons, then lean in slightly. “If I tell you something, you cannot tell anybody.”
Her eyes immediately widen. “Bitch.”
“No, I’m serious.”
“I’m serious too! What’s going on with you?”
You hesitate.
And in that hesitation, the alley memory comes back all at once.
You lower your voice. “The night we went to get tacos…”
Tiff leans in so fast she nearly falls out her chair.
“…I wasn’t just across the street for no reason.”
Her brows pull together. “Okay…”
You wet your lips. “I saw Spider-Man.”
Silence.
Then—
Tiff blinks. “Girl, be serious.”
“I am serious.”
“No, because you cannot just casually say that and expect me to remain calm.”
“I’m not expecting you to remain calm.”
“Okay, good, because I can’t.” She grabs your wrist. “What do you mean you saw Spider-Man?”
You glance around again before lowering your voice even more. “I saw him on a rooftop. Then he dropped into that alley by the laundromat, and I followed him.”
Tiff’s mouth falls open. “You did what?”
“I know.”
“No, because what if he would’ve webbed you into next week?”
“He literally did, actually.”
Her eyes bug. “HE WHAT?”
You instantly shush her. “Keep your voice down!”
She clamps a hand over her mouth, then whisper-yells, “He webbed you?!”
You nod once, already feeling your face warm from reliving it.
Tiff grabs your forearm harder. “What happened after that?”
And because she’s your best friend, because the story is practically burning a hole in your chest, and because you’ve been carrying it around alone all weekend, you tell her from beginning to end.
You tell her about finding him in the alley.
About your phone exposing your location at the worst possible moment.
About him yanking you toward him because your ringtone scared the shit out of him.
Tiff is gripping your arm so hard at this point she might actually cut off circulation.
“Oh my God,” she whispers. “Oh my God.”
“I know.”
“Did he say anything?”
You nod. “He asked if I was okay.”
Her jaw drops. “Bitch.”
“I know.”
“Like with his real voice?”
“Yes.”
“Was it sexy?”
You pause.
“Hella.”
Tiff slaps your arm. “I KNEW IT.”
“Was he cute?”
You don’t answer.
Her eyebrows raise. “Wait—oh my God, you saw his face?”
Your heart trips.
For a split second, you hear him again.
Please don’t tell anybody.
You swallow.
“No,” you lie, trying to keep your voice smooth. “Not really. It was dark. And he still had his mask on.”
Tiff studies your face for a beat too long.
Then, thankfully, she accepts it with a suspicious squint. “Mmm.”
You shrug, forcing casual. “I mean, he did sound like he was around our age.”
“That’s insane,” she breathes. “Actually insane. You met Spider-Man in a dirty alley behind a taco spot.”
“When you say it like that, it sounds worse.”
“It is worse!”
You laugh under your breath despite yourself.
Tiff shakes her head slowly. “And you ain’t tell nobody?”
“No.”
“Not even Marie?”
“Absolutely not.”
“Good,” she says immediately. “Because she would’ve gone all FBI and found him by sunrise.”
You snort. “Exactly.”
The warning bell goes again, sharper this time.
Tiff groans and stands, adjusting her bag on her shoulder. “Damn. I hate being an educated woman.”
You stand too, still feeling weirdly lighter now that someone else knows, even if only halfway.
Tiff grabs your arm before you can split off. “Wait.”
You look at her.
Her expression softens a little. “You good though? Like… for real?”
Something in your chest tugs.
Because under all the jokes and dramatics, Tiff always notices.
You nod once. “Yeah.”
She studies you, then gives your arm a squeeze. “Okay. Text me if anything else happens. And if Spider-Man swings through your window, I want updates in real time.”
You roll your eyes. “Bye.”
She grins. “Love you.”
“Love you too.”
Then you both peel off in opposite directions into the blur of campus.
•••
Geometry is hell.
Not metaphorically.
Not dramatically.
Literally.
By the time you make it to Mr. Banner’s class, your brain already feels like mashed potatoes.
You slide into your usual seat with a sigh, pulling out your notebook, calculator, and pencil pouch while students shuffle in around you. The room smells faintly like dry erase markers and overworked air conditioning.
At the front, Mr. Banner is setting up the projector with the same quiet, slightly distracted energy he always has, like his brain is running eight tabs in the background at once.
Bruce Banner is, objectively, a good professor.
He’s patient. Smart. Kind.
Unfortunately, geometry remains evil.
The class itself goes by in a blur of formulas, diagrams, and Mr. Banner’s calm voice explaining concepts that somehow make sense while he’s saying them and then evaporate the second you try to do them on your own.
You take notes.
You really do.
Your notebook is full.
Neat little equations. Labeled diagrams. Helpful side comments to yourself like girl what the hell is this and this triangle can go to hell.
You participate once. Get an answer half-right. Survive.
But by the end of class, when people start packing up around you, your brain feels like it’s been hit by a bus made of protractors.
You’re halfway through stuffing your notebook into your bag when you hear it.
“Mrs. Y/L/N?”
You glance up.
Mr. Banner is standing near the front desk, papers in hand. “Can I speak with you for a moment?”
Your stomach drops.
Oh, brother.
You sling your bag over your shoulder and make your way down while the rest of the class starts filing out, a few students lingering to finish conversations or zip up backpacks.
Mr. Banner offers you a small, apologetic smile. “I didn’t want to call this out in front of everyone, but I wanted to check in.”
That sentence alone is enough to make your soul leave your body.
You blink. “Okay…”
He glances down at his gradebook. “You’re very engaged in class, and I can tell you’re trying, but your test scores haven’t reflected that.”
You already know where this is going, and somehow it still sucks.
He continues gently, “At the moment, you’re very close to failing.”
You physically recoil. “Damn.”
His mouth twitches like he’s trying not to laugh. “I know.”
You exhale hard, rubbing your forehead. “Okay, wait. How close are we talking?”
He turns the paper slightly so you can see.
And yeah.
That’s ugly.
You close your eyes for a second.
“If you don’t do well on the next test,” he says carefully, “there’s a strong chance you’ll have to retake the course.”
Retake.
As in pay for it again.
As in waste another semester fighting for your life with angles and proofs and whatever evil mathematician created this class in the first place.
Your face falls immediately. “No, I can’t do that.”
Mr. Banner’s expression softens. “I figured you’d want to avoid that.”
You laugh once, dry and humorless. “Yeah. I’m trying not to financially collapse over a trapezoid.”
That gets a small chuckle out of him.
Then you straighten a little. “Is there anything I can do? Like… extra credit? Study packets? A prayer circle?”
He smiles. “Maybe not the last one. But I do think you’d benefit from a tutor.”
You sigh.
Honestly? Not shocking.
Still painful.
Mr. Banner nods toward a stack of folders on his desk. “I have a few students I usually recommend. Strong in class, reliable, good at breaking things down.”
You nod slowly, resigned. “Okay. Yeah. I’ll do it.”
“Good.” He glances past you toward the doorway. “Actually…”
You turn slightly.
There are still a couple students in the room gathering their things.
One of them is standing a few rows back with his backpack half-zipped, head tilted down as he shoves a notebook inside.
“Mr. Parker?” Mr. Banner calls.
The guy looks up from his backpack.
And your entire body goes still.
No.
No fucking way.
“Can you come here for a second?”
He starts walking over, jogging down the staircase to the front, and your breath catches before you can stop it.
Brown hair.
Soft face.
Sharp jaw.
Tall.
Lean.
Pretty brown eyes.
It hits all at once.
Like your brain and body recognize him before logic can catch up.
That’s him.
That’s him.
Spider-Man.
For one dizzy, suspended second, the whole room seems to narrow around the two of you.
He sees you.
Really sees you.
And stops.
Not enough for Mr. Banner to notice, but you catch it. The smallest hitch in his step. The quick flash in his eyes.
Recognition.
Panic.
And something else.
Something warmer.
His heart seems to trip the same way yours does.
Because he remembers you too.
Of course he does.
You’re the girl from the alley. The one who saw his face. The one he’s been trying very hard not to think about all weekend and failing at miserably.
Because he has been thinking about you.
More than he wants to admit.
He’d spent all of Saturday pretending he wasn’t replaying your smile in his head.
He spent Sunday telling himself it was just stress, just adrenaline, just the lingering weirdness of almost getting exposed in an alley by a girl with a Brandy ringtone, big doe eyes, and full lips in a purple dress that had been haunting him like a curse ever since.
And now here you are.
Standing in front of him.
In broad daylight.
In one of his actual classes.
Looking even prettier than you did that night, which feels deeply unfair.
His stomach drops straight through the floor.
Mr. Banner, blissfully unaware that he’s accidentally detonated a bomb in the middle of his classroom, gestures between you both.
“Mr. Parker’s one of the students I had in mind,” he says. “He’s one of the strongest in the class. Excellent grades, very patient. I thought he might be a good fit to tutor you, that is if he has the time?”
The guy Mr. Banner calls Parker blinks once.
Then recovers fast enough to be suspiciously impressive.
“Oh—uh.” He clears his throat. “Actually, I’m kinda… really busy right now.”
You stare at him.
He avoids your eyes for exactly half a second before looking at Mr. Banner instead.
“Like, with labs. And assignments. And…” He gestures vaguely. “Stuff.”
Stuff.
You nearly laugh.
Mr. Banner watches him for a second, then gives a small nod. “That’s too bad.”
Parker relaxes—just a little.
“But,” Mr. Banner adds, almost as an afterthought, “you are one of the strongest students in this class, Parker. You pick things up quickly.”
Parker’s ears go pink.
You almost lose it.
“And you explain concepts well,” Mr. Banner continues. “That’s a rare skill. One worth sharing.”
Parker opens his mouth.
Closes it.
Opens it again.
You can practically see him trying to decide if this is a trap.
Maybe it’s the desperation of knowing you cannot fail this class.
Or maybe it’s the fact that he’s standing right here in front of you after two days of living in your head rent-free, and if you don’t say something now, he’s absolutely going to flee like a startled deer.
So you step in.
“Please.”
Both men look at you.
You turn fully to the guy you haven’t been able to stop thinking about all weekend, and for a second, your voice comes out more earnest than you meant it to.
“If I fail this class, I’m cooked. Like fully, financially, spiritually, academically cooked,” you say.
Parker blinks at you.
You keep going, because apparently humiliation is free today.
“I do not have retake-a-whole-class money. I barely have buy-a-cute-lip-gloss money right now.”
Mr. Banner coughs into his fist like he’s hiding a laugh.
Parker’s mouth twitches.
You lock onto it immediately.
Oh.
He almost smiled.
“Please,” you say again, softer this time. “I’ll work around your schedule. I just really need help.”
And that’s the thing.
Peter Parker can survive falling off buildings, getting punched through concrete, and almost being murdered by supervillains.
But apparently what takes him out is you looking at him like that.
He exhales slowly through his nose.
Then, against every instinct screaming at him to run far and fast, he says:
“…Okay.”
Mr. Banner brightens immediately. “Excellent.”
Parker looks like he regrets being born.
You try very hard not to smile too hard.
Mr. Banner gives you both a few details about timing and expectations, tells you he’s glad you’re being proactive, and then finally dismisses you.
The second he does, tutor boy is gone.
Like gone gone.
One second he’s standing there awkwardly adjusting his backpack strap, the next he’s halfway out the classroom door like the floor’s on fire.
You blink.
Then immediately follow.
“Hey!”
He doesn’t stop.
You move faster. “Wait!”
He turns the corner into the hallway and you catch up just enough to grab his sleeve lightly.
He jolts.
You both stop.
Students move around you in waves, chatter echoing off the walls, but the second he turns to face you, everything else blurs a little.
You point at him, eyes wide. “It’s you.”
His eyes dart around. “Shh!”
“You’re—”
He takes your wrist gently but urgently and steers you a few steps off to the side near a quieter stretch of wall between classrooms.
Your back bumps lightly against the cinderblock.
He steps in close enough to block the flow of students from hearing, eyes wide behind his glasses.
“Please don’t say that so loud,” he says under his breath.
You stare at him.
Because now that you’re not in a dark alley and he’s not in a skin-tight superhero suit, he somehow looks even more absurdly cute.
He’s wearing a plain zip-up hoodie, faded jeans, and a backpack that looks one bad semester away from collapse.
His curls are slightly messy, like he ran a hand through them too many times.
He looks like he belongs in a science lab and also on the cover of your personal downfall.
“You’re Spider-Man,” you whisper anyway.
He squeezes his eyes shut for half a second like he just got hit with a tax bill. “Okay, see, that’s exactly what I’m talking about.”
You can’t help it.
You laugh.
A small, startled sound slips out of him too, mostly because he wasn’t expecting you to laugh at all.
Then his expression shifts, turning more serious.
He lowers his voice. “You didn’t tell anybody, right?”
Something in his face makes your teasing soften immediately.
You shake your head. “No.”
“Like… actually?”
“Yes.” You hold his gaze. “I promised, remember?”
That lands.
You can see it.
Some of the tension in his shoulders loosens just a little.
Not fully.
But enough.
You cross your arms. “All I want is to pass geometry. I’m not trying to ruin your life.”
His eyes flick to yours, and for a second there’s something almost embarrassed there.
“Yeah, I figured,” he says quietly.
Then, because the silence is suddenly getting too intense and your heart is beating at a rapid rate, you clear your throat.
“So…”
He looks at you.
“…you got a name?”
His mouth twitches.
“Peter,” he says.
The name settles in your chest in a way it absolutely should not.
Peter.
Of course his name is Peter. It matches him to a tee.
You tell him your name too, and when he repeats it back, soft and a little careful like he doesn’t want to get it wrong, your stomach flips so hard you almost get annoyed.
His voice does that rough-soft thing again and it should honestly be illegal.
For a second, neither of you says anything.
You just stand there in the hallway, looking at each other like both of you are trying not to acknowledge how weirdly intense this is for two people who technically met by a dumpster.
Then you straighten a little. “So… where do you wanna study?”
Peter blinks, dragged back to earth. “Oh. Right. Studying.”
You bite back a smile. “Yes, tutor boy. Geometry. Focus.”
He lets out a tiny huff of a laugh.
Cute.
Very cute.
He rubs the back of his neck, glancing away for a second before looking back at you. “Um… I mean, we could do the library, but it gets kinda crowded in the afternoons. Or…” He hesitates. “Your place? If that’s okay?”
You nod. “Yeah, that’s fine.”
“Okay.” He nods too, like he’s trying to convince himself this is normal. “Cool. Cool.”
Then there’s another awkward pause.
You both realize at the same time that neither of you has each other’s number.
“Oh—right,” he says quickly, already fumbling for his phone. “We should probably, uh…”
“Yeah.”
He unlocks it so fast he almost drops it.
You definitely notice.
He definitely notices you noticing.
And his ears go pink again.
God.
He hands you the phone. “You can just… put it in.”
Your fingers brush his for half a second and both of you go weirdly still.
Then you type your number in before your body can betray you further.
He texts you right away so you have his.
Peter :)
You stare at the contact for one extra beat.
Then look back up at him.
He’s already watching your face.
You smile before you can stop yourself.
He smiles back, small and shy and a little crooked.
It hits harder than it should.
“So,” you say, locking your phone. “Tomorrow at four works?”
“Yeah, sure,” he agrees.
Then he shifts his backpack higher on his shoulder, taking a small step backward. “I should, uh, go.”
“Right.”
Another pause.
Neither of you moves for a second.
Then he gives you the tiniest little wave.
Actually a wave.
You nearly fold where you stand.
“Bye, Peter.”
He looks at you for one beat too long.
“Bye.”
Then he turns and disappears down the hallway.
And you stand there for a full five seconds afterward staring at the space he left behind like an idiot.
Because what the hell just happened?
Spider-Man is your geometry tutor.
Your life is a joke.
ᥫ᭡. Under the Mask - P.P
Black!F!Reader x College Peter Parker
Synopsis— After the world forgets who Spider-Man really is, you accidentally discover the truth and suddenly, you can’t get him out of your head. When you realize the boy behind the mask walks the same college halls as you, curiosity turns into something deeper. Because the hero everyone sees is only half the story, and the guy underneath the mask might be even harder to forget. 18+ MDNI
A/N: you guys don’t know how excited I am for my man to be back on my screen. It’s been so long. I had this story in the drafts for almost a year I think now and I thought this would be the perfect time to post it. Peter and the reader are Seniors in college so they’re 21-22 years of age.
Warning: mild language, alcohol, party, form of stalking-ish?
Masterlist : Part 1 Part 2 Part 3
────────── 🕷️ ──────────
The off campus house party was already packed when you walk in, red cups everywhere, bass rattling the floorboards, and somebody’s LED lights flickering like a cheap club. The room smells like tequila, perfume, and bad decisions. You tug your lilac dress down a little and adjust your scarf, praying your curls don’t poof up before midnight.
“Okayyy, Mystery Inc. in the building!” Ziair yells over the loud music, holding the door open like y’all just won an award.
Tiff laughs. “Boy, shut up! We’re not even matching for real.”
She’s in an orange crop top, fake glasses, and platform boots (Velma), but make it baddie. Marie’s got on a green top and cargo skirt (Shaggy), while Lee is rocking a Scooby onesie. You? Daphne, obviously, because purple’s definitely your color.
Lee’s filming on his phone already. “Nah, this the hardest group costume out here. Look at us!”
You roll your eyes playfully. “If we don’t go viral, Imma be upset.”
Ziair’s orange ascot is already crooked. “Hold on, I need one for the story too. Everybody say ‘ruh-roh!’”
“I know you fucking lying,” you hear Marie mutter, which makes the rest of you snicker as you gather close to take a group photo.
You all scatter into the crowd after that, drifting from one conversation to the next like you own the place. Every few steps, somebody stops you to compliment your costume. Classmates, friends, that one guy who never remembers your name but swears he’s seen you in Econ. The music is loud enough to vibrate through your ribs, the kind of beat that makes people act like they’re in a music video.
Ziair disappears for two minutes and comes back with a tray of shots, gathering y’all into the kitchen.
“Alright, gang,” he says, handing them out. “To the best-looking Mystery Inc. in the tri-state area.”
“Ain’t you from the Midwest?” Tiff asks.
“So? There’s more than one tri-state, and we’re the best looking in all of them,” he hoots.
Everyone cheers their cups together. The usual shouts of “to bad decisions!” and “to being too fine for midterms!” echo out before you all throw the drinks back. The burn hits fast in your throat, but it’s the good kind, the kind that makes you grin.
Marie wipes her mouth and leans on the counter. “Aight, let’s talk about these costumes tonight,” she says. “Because if I see one more sexy cat costume, my eyes might literally get stuck in the back of my head.”
Tiff snickers. “At least some people are committed. Did you see that girl with the fog machine attached to her costume? She brought her own atmosphere.”
Ziair grins. “Nah, my favorite was the dude dressed as an outlet. His girlfriend was the plug. Real teamwork.”
Marie smiles in amusement. “Mmm. If somebody shows up dressed as Spider-Man though, I might have to go home with them.”
“Not you in love with a man you ain’t never seen?” Tiff teases.
Marie shrugs, unapologetic. “He been saving New York since freshman year. Community service fine as hell. That’s my type.”
You laugh at her comment and glance around the party.
Lee then cuts in. “Y’all saw that video from the train station last Friday? He saved like, what? Twenty people?”
The video had been everywhere. A train had derailed just enough to tilt off the tracks, one side hanging over the edge while people inside screamed and scrambled. Sparks were flying, metal screeching like it was seconds from giving out. And then he just appeared. Webs shot out, anchoring the train to the platform, holding it steady while he pulled doors open and got people out one by one like it was nothing. By the time emergency crews showed up, everyone was already safe, and he was gone, like he was never there in the first place.
“Yeah,” Ziair answers. “Man’s been carrying the city on his back. And lowkey? It’s kinda refreshing. We don’t really got heroes like that anymore since Tony passed, and the Avengers just… well…”
That earns a moment of silence from the group. The Avengers used to feel like the center of everything, now they’re just… history. After the blip, everything was different. Tony Stark was gone, so was Black Widow and Captain America. It’s wild. They saved the world, and somehow the world just kept moving without them.
Spider-Man really just… showed up one day. No flashy debut, no billionaire backing him, no dramatic “origin story” plastered on the news. One week, New York was just New York, loud, messy, running late. The next, there were clips of some guy in red and blue swinging between skyscrapers like it was nothing.
It started small, a few blurry videos on Twitter of him stopping bike thieves and catching people who fell from fire escapes. Then came the bigger stuff. Foiled robberies. Armed car chases. Even that train malfunction last week.
And somehow, for the past few years, he’s been everywhere and nowhere at the same time. No interviews, no public appearances. Every reporter who’s tried to get a quote says he just swings off.
You’ve seen the clips, of course. The way he moves like gravity doesn’t apply to him. He’s fast, graceful, almost cocky sometimes. And the more you watch, the more you get why people are obsessed. There’s something magnetic about someone you can’t quite pin down. Whoever he is, he kept his identity hidden really well.
You shrug, a small smirk tugging at your lips. “I mean… I kinda get what Marie’s saying though,” you admit. “Something about not knowing who’s under the mask makes it more mysterious.”
Tiff groans. “Oh, so y’all both need help. You guys are over here crushing on a man that could be sixty with a beer belly under that suit.”
Marie scoffs, flicking her hair over her shoulder dramatically. “Girl, please. I seen those videos in 4K. That man does not have a beer belly. You can see the outline of an eight-pack through that suit.”
Ziair raises a brow. “An eight-pack? You studied that man like you writing a dissertation.”
“I did my research,” Marie says proudly. “He be swinging off buildings. You can’t do that with no weak core.”
The DJ switches tracks, bass rattling the room as the lights flicker red. Lee’s the first to jump into action, shouting over the beat. “Aight, we didn’t come here to stand and talk about spider-boy all night, so let’s get this party going!”
The next few hours fly by in flashes of lights, laughter, and too many bass drops to count. The air is humid with body heat. Somebody’s cousin is doing backflips in the kitchen, and Tiff is hyping them up like she’s getting paid for it.
You lose track of how many songs you dance through. The shots keep coming, pink lemonade, lime, something blue that definitely wasn’t FDA approved.
Your face is warm, your curls slightly frizzed, and your feet hurt, but in the best way. Everything feels soft and bright and a little hazy around the edges.
At one point, Marie is in the middle of the living room, throwing it back on some dude dressed like a vampire, and the house erupts. Phones are out, flashes going off, people yelling over the music. Lee is fanning her dramatically with a paper plate, hollering, “GO BEST FRIEND!” while you, Tiff, and Ziair scream in awe.
By the time the next remix hits, your throat’s hoarse from laughing and yelling lyrics you don’t even remember. You lean into Lee’s shoulder as he holds you up, tipsy and grinning, voice raised over the music.
“Okay, hear me out,” you shout over the music, blinking through the haze. “I could really go for some tacos right now.”
Lee blinks at you, eyes glassy but amused before he shouts back. “You saying that like it’s not the best idea you’ve ever had.”
You nudge him, already giggling. “No, I’m serious. Like the little spot on the corner a few blocks down with the neon sign and the good ass salsa.”
Lee’s eyes light up instantly. “Ohhh yes! Say less.”
You both look around the chaotic living room. Ziair’s half-asleep on the couch, drink in hand, nodding to the beat like his soul already left his body. You wave your hand in front of his face. “Taco run. You in?”
He barely cracks an eye open. “Nah, I’m good. I’m one shot away from retirement.”
“Boring,” Lee says dramatically, which gets him the middle finger from Ziair.
Across the room, Tiff’s dancing with her cup like it’s a microphone. You grab her arm between songs. “We’re going to get tacos! You coming?”
She stops mid-step, eyes widening in excitement. “Hell yes! I was literally just thinking about food!”
That’s two out of four. You glance around to find Marie, only to see her in the kitchen, making out with the vampire dude from earlier.
So much for her Spider-Man.
Lee smirks. “Yeah, she’s not leaving anytime soon.”
“Guess it’s just us, then.” You shrug, and he claps his hands together.
“Dream team,” he says proudly.
Stepping outside feels like stepping into another world. The noise from the party fades behind you, just muffled bass and distant chatter as cool air hits your skin.
A few people are gathered by the porch, chatting and waiting for taxis. One girl in a silver dress points at you three as you pass. “Yo, y’all look so good as fuck! Mystery Inc. ate!”
Tiff stops to strike a playful pose. “You know it, girl!”
You turn to smile at the woman as you head down the walkway. “Thanks, girl. Y’all look good too!”
The three of you wander down the block, your laughter echoing off the brick walls and houses. The night feels almost soft, the kind of buzzed, in-between calm that only usually happens around this time. Streetlights glow buttery gold on the cracked pavement, and the air smells faintly like rain and someone’s late-night barbecue.
“I swear, if they outta carne asada again, Imma cry,” Tiff whines.
Lee snorts. “Girl, you said that last time and still ordered three chicken tacos.”
You giggle, the sound half-slurred, half-content. “No, because she’s right though, last time they were out of almost everything.”
“That’s ’cause we showed up ten minutes before they close! They probably saw us and got pissed.”
“Please,” Tiff shoots back, linking her arm through yours, “they love us. I’m basically on the punch card program at this point.”
“More like on their wanted sign,” you tease, bumping her hip lightly.
She gasps, hand to her heart. “Wow. Betrayed by my own best friend. I hope your tacos come out soggy, bitch.”
Lee hoots, loud enough to startle a pigeon from the power line. “Nah, not soggy tacos!”
You’re all giggling like kids by the time you reach the corner.
The neon restaurant sign ahead casts a soft red glow over the sidewalk, flickering faintly like it’s been overworked.
The smell hits before you even get there, grilled meat, onions, and lime. Heaven.
Lee claps his hands once. “We made it. Tacos before the hangover, God’s plan.”
“Period,” Tiff says, already pulling the door open, a little too excited for someone in platform boots.
Inside, there’s barely enough room to fit the three of you. The fluorescent lights buzz overhead, and the air is thick with smoke coming from the stove. Two people work behind the counter: a man on the grill and a lady taking orders.
Soft music hums from the radio. You squeeze in behind Lee and Tiff, shoulder to shoulder.
When it’s your turn to order, you step up, ordering your usual with a water to drink before paying.
“Please tell me you guys still have carne asada,” Tiff begs the lady next.
The woman at the counter smiles. “Sí.”
Tiff gasps dramatically. “Praise be!” She does a tiny dance, nearly tripping over her boots. “I knew tonight was blessed!”
You roll your eyes, laughing. “It’s not that deep.”
“It is when you’ve craved it at 1 A.M.,” she argues before placing her order.
Lee gets his usual too, al pastor and a side of chips he swears he’ll share but never does.
The food comes out quicker than expected, yours first, neatly wrapped in foil and tucked into a brown paper bag. The smell alone makes your stomach growl.
There aren’t any tables inside, just a narrow counter by the window and one stool that looks like it’s been there since 2003. So, you decide to head outside, pushing open the glass door and stepping back into the cool night air.
The city remains awake. The party’s distant hum is replaced by the faint sound of cars beeping from blocks away. You sit on the edge of the curb, setting your bag beside you, the foil warm as you pull it out.
Unwrapping one taco, you blow on it to cool it off before taking a bite.
Mmh, perfection.
A hum slips out before you can stop it. You do a little happy dance, feet kicking out slightly, shoulders shimmying as you chew.
“God, this is so good,” you mumble to no one but yourself. One taco in hand, phone in the other.
You chuckle as you tap through your social media, laughing at posts your mutuals shared. Suddenly, an unfamiliar voice snaps you out of your scroll.
“Hey, lil’ miss purple dress,” the raspy voice says.
You turn just enough to see a homeless man in a jacket shuffling closer, holding a crumpled paper cup. His eyes are kind of unfocused.
“Spare some change?” he asks.
You sigh, cheeks puffing out before you dig into your small crossbody bag. “I ain’t got much on me,” you say, fishing out a few crumpled dollar bills and some loose change. “But here.”
The man’s eyes light up as he takes it. “You a real one,” he says, nodding gratefully. “God bless you, miss purple dress.”
You grin, waving him off with your taco still in hand. “Go get you something to eat, old man.”
He tips his head before shuffling down the block.
You shake your head as you watch him disappear. “Only in New York,” you mutter, taking another bite, the kind that makes you close your eyes for a second just to savor it.
Your phone buzzes against your thigh, screen lighting up. A text from Tiff: They takin forever, girl. Don’t eat all your tacos without me 😭
You smile, still chewing as you type back with one hand: No promises.
You lock your phone and place it back in your lap, licking a bit of salsa off your thumb as you look around.
The taco spot’s neon sign still flickers behind you. A car passes at the far end of the block, headlights sweeping over the cracked pavement before vanishing around the corner. Somewhere, a siren wails in the distance, then fades.
As you enjoy your tacos and let your eyes wander, you notice it.
A flicker of movement, high up, across the street. Something quick, too smooth to be human. At first, you think it’s a trick of the light, maybe a pigeon, or maybe your tipsy brain making stuff up. But then it happens again, a blur of red and blue cutting through the dark, slipping between rooftops like a shadow with purpose.
Your chewing slows.
You squint, leaning forward on your knees. The figure moves again, landing soundlessly on top of a building a few doors down, crouched low and perfectly still. Even from this distance, you can see the faint shimmer of the city’s glow reflecting off something metallic, his suit.
Spider-Man.
You blink hard, half expecting the image to dissolve like a mirage, but he’s still there. Real. In the flesh.
Then, before you can process it, he drops, fast, disappearing into the narrow alley beside a laundromat.
Your heart jumps into your throat. You glance back toward the inside of the restaurant. Tiff and Lee are still inside, laughing at something on the counter, completely unaware.
You turn back to the alley, pulse quickening. Curiosity, or maybe tequila-fueled delusion, burns hot in your chest.
You whisper under your breath, “No fucking way,” as you slowly stand, wiping your hands off on a napkin, last taco long forgotten.
And before you can talk yourself out of it, your feet are already moving toward the alley.
Your steps echo softly against the pavement as you cross the street. The closer you get, the darker it feels, like the streetlights decided this part of the block wasn’t worth the effort. The alley yawns open between two buildings, narrow and shadowed, with only a faint glimmer of light spilling from a busted security lamp overhead.
You stop just before the entrance, peering in.
Nothing.
Just a pile of trash bags near a dumpster, the kind that always seem to leak something suspicious. The noise of the city remains behind you. But here? Nothing moves.
You tilt your head, squinting deeper into the dark. “Okay…” you whisper, almost laughing at yourself. “Maybe I’m a little drunker than I thought.”
You start to turn back, thinking about telling Lee and Tiff how you hallucinated New York’s most famous vigilante, when you hear it.
A voice.
Low, breathless, and close.
“Aw, come on, not now,” the voice says, sharp and frustrated.
You freeze.
The sound comes again, metal clinking, followed by a quick, annoyed sigh. It’s definitely coming from the alley, somewhere beyond the shadows near the back.
Your pulse jumps.
Slowly, you step forward, shoes crunching lightly on gravel as you lean just far enough around the corner to see.
A flash of red and blue.
And a man, crouched halfway up the side of the wall like gravity’s just a suggestion, his gloved hands fiddling with something on his wrist. The light hits his suit just right, catching the subtle sheen of web patterns that shimmer like silk.
Spider-Man.
He’s right there. Not a video, not a blur, real, alive, and mumbling to himself like a dude whose car just broke down on the side of the road.
You blink once. Twice.
Then he drops.
It’s effortless, like the air itself caught him. His boots hit the ground with barely a sound, and he straightens, now hitting the gadget on the side of his wrist.
You duck behind the nearest thing you can find, a stack of old cardboard boxes next to an overflowing trash bin. The smell makes you instantly regret that decision, nearly gagging, but there’s no way in hell you’re moving now. You crouch low, peeking through a narrow gap.
He’s standing only a few feet away now. For a second, the dim light hides everything but the outline of him, tall, lean, strong shoulders that move with quiet precision. His chest rises and falls, and then—
He tugs the mask off.
You can’t see his face clearly at first, just the shape of it in the half-light. He rubs a hand through his hair, muttering a few inaudible curse words under his breath before turning slightly.
And then he abruptly pauses.
You don’t know if it’s instinct, some superhero sixth sense, or the sound of your heart slamming against your ribs, but he freezes, which makes you duck lower. His head tilts just enough for the broken streetlight above to catch his features.
And oh.
You forget to breathe.
Tan skin, a jawline sharp enough to cut, eyes alert and darting around the alley like he’s scanning for danger. His hair falls against his forehead, brown, fluffy, and messy like he’s been running his hands through it for hours.
What really knocks you sideways, though, is how young he looks, about your age, early twenties. A college student? The kind who should be cramming for midterms, not saving subway cars and outrunning gunfire.
He’s attractive.
No.
Dangerously attractive.
The kind that borders on illegal.
That’s when your phone in your crossbody betrays you.
🎵 “the boy is mine 3x.” 🎵
Before you can process the sound, something tight snaps around your waist and yanks you up. Your feet leave the ground, a startled gasp leaving your throat as the world tilts.
The next thing you know, you slam into a warm, solid chest. Hard muscle under thin fabric. The air whooshes right out of you as your palms splay over the raised black spider emblem.
You freeze, eyes wide.
There he is, right in front of you now. Close enough to see the faint stubble along his jaw and the rise and fall of his chest beneath the red and blue suit. His lips part slightly, like he’s about to speak but forgot how.
Your heart stutters, thudding so hard you’re sure he can feel it through the paper-thin space between you. His gloved hand twitches where it’s still braced at your waist.
He’s taller, enough that you have to tilt your face up to meet his.
Wow. His eyes.
Soft brown with gold flecks. For someone who swings off skyscrapers and fights crime for a living, his eyes look… human. Kind.
You can see a hundred emotions flicker across his face in quick cuts.
Surprise, curiosity, then clean, sharp panic.
And then you hear it again, his voice.
It’s scratchy, like he’s been breathing cold air for hours, deep, but a little raw at the edges. “Are—” He swallows, tries again, softer. “Are you okay?”
Your brain does a somersault.
Spider-Man is speaking to me.
When you don’t reply, he clears his throat, gaze skipping anywhere that isn’t your eyes.
His free hand rubs the back of his neck, a nervous tell that feels wildly human for a guy who just physics-defied you across an alley.
“I didn’t, I mean, I didn’t mean to,” he says, gesturing vaguely at the two of you being one breath apart. “Grab you like that. Sorry. I panicked.” A beat. “Your ringtone scared me.”
You finally snap out of your trance, blinking rapidly before speaking. “Brandy has that effect on men.”
A tiny, incredulous laugh slips out of him, quick, deep, and warm, like you surprised it out of his chest. The sound makes something flutter low in your stomach. He notices that he still has you wrapped up in a web and his hand on your waist. He goes to move it away but immediately second-guesses it and lets it hover instead.
“I should, uh…” He flicks a glance at the web line, then at you. “Set you down. Not that you’re not down. You’re clearly down.” He squeezes his eyes shut for half a second, mortified. “I’m doing amazing at words.”
“Hey.” You can’t help the smile tugging at your mouth. “It’s okay.”
He exhales, the breath fogging faintly in the alley chill. Carefully, so carefully, he eases the webbing from your waist. The sticky line snaps free with a quiet thwap, and he takes a small step back, like he’s reminding himself that space is a thing that exists. Up close, every detail’s louder, the faint rasp of his breathing, the way he shifts his weight toe to heel, toe to heel, like energy buzzes through him even when he’s standing still.
This is the part that shouldn’t make sense. You’ve seen him punch through windshields in news clips, land from four stories like it’s a hop off a curb, and yet here, he fidgets. He worries the edge of his glove with his thumb. He keeps almost meeting your eyes, then looking away like he’s afraid of staring. It’s the opposite of Spider-Man, not a symbol, just a person trying not to be weird about accidentally web shooting a girl by a dumpster.
Your phone trills again, loud in the narrow alley, screen lighting your face.
His head snaps down to the glow. Panic flashes behind his eyes. “Did you—” His voice comes out rough. He swallows, tries again, faster. “Did you take photos? Or record me?”
You blink, taken aback. “What? No.”
He steps a half inch closer without meaning to, shoulders wired tight. “Are you sure? You’re not lying?” It’s not accusatory so much as terrified, like the word itself could pull the mask back on.
You take a step back, palm lifting between you. “Chill,” you say, steady, cutting through his spiral. “I didn’t take photos of shit. My friends are calling me, probably wondering where I am.”
He exhales, the tension in his shoulders easing slightly, but he takes another step closer.
“Hey,” he says, low and rough, “you can’t tell anybody you saw me.”
You blink in confusion. “Why?”
“Please,” he says, ignoring your question, urgency cracking through the shyness. “Please don’t tell anyone. Just… it’s better this way.”
The tone throws you. It’s not the voice of some untouchable superhero. It’s raw, almost pleading. He’s standing there in that ridiculous, iconic suit, but everything about him feels human. Nervous. Scared. You can see it in the way his throat bobs when he swallows, the way his fingers flex once at his side like he’s fighting the urge to reach for the mask again.
You hesitate, searching his face. “Okay,” you whisper. “I promise.”
The tension bleeds out of him instantly. His shoulders drop, the hard edge softening into something boyish, relieved. “Thank you,” he says, so soft you barely hear it over the hum of the city.
Your phone rings again, loud and sudden between you. You glance down, Tiff’s name lighting up your screen, and when you look back up—
He’s gone.
Not a sound, not a footstep. Just a faint thwip still echoing off the bricks and a thin silver thread of web swaying from the fire escape above before it disappears into shadow.
You stare for a long second at the empty space he left behind, your pulse still racing.
Your phone keeps buzzing in your hand. You fumble to answer, breath still uneven. “Hello?”
“Girl, where the hell did you go?!” Tiff’s voice practically explodes through the speaker. “We thought you got kidnapped or something! Lee was about to go all Scooby-Doo and form a search party!”
You press a hand to your chest, forcing out a laugh as you start walking toward the streetlight. “Relax, I’m fine! I’m, uh, I’m across the street.”
“Across the street?” Tiff repeats, disbelieving. “From the taco place? What the hell are you doing over there? I was two seconds away from calling the cops and your mama.”
You snort, muttering something back to her as you glance over your shoulder into the dark alley.
It’s completely empty now, not a sound, not a shadow, nothing but the faint glint of a stray piece of webbing on the brick.

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