Breakfast is toast and coffee and the brief luxury of a newspaper that still arrives on the stoop. He reads the headlines with the attention someone gives to weather: useful tangents about the day but not the fulcrum of his destiny. There’s an article about a zoning board rejecting a proposed development in a neighborhood two blocks from his school, a column about the mayor’s latest photo-op, and a thin piece on a philanthropic gala that shouldered a page of society. One small blurb catches his eye—an anonymous tip about unusual cargo at the East River docks. He circles the line with an index finger and folds the paper as if committing the tip to memory.
Morning finds him exhausted but restless. There is an invigoration to living on two edges; each feeds the other. He goes through the motions until his after-school shift at the lab, where a professor with a lined face and kind eyes assigns an experiment on polymer fatigue. There is joy in manipulation on the microscale—the way a polymer chain aligns under stress, the way heat can coax order out of chaos. He loses himself for a while in the delicate choreography of molecules and, for a brief, stolen moment, feels happiness that is small and honest.
The hour between his rooftop patrol and evening classes is spent invisible. He returns to school, showers in a bathroom stall, and emerges as Peter again—awkward, winded, blinking against fluorescent light. He sits through lectures with the strange dual awareness of someone who’s been in a fight and is trying to take notes at the same time. His friends—Ned and MJ in this telling—hover at the periphery with their own dramas. Ned is incandescent with theories and loyalty; he bombards Peter with conjectures about robotics competitions and comic-book crossovers. MJ offers a glance that is equal parts exasperation and affection, a look that suggests she knows more than she says.
His other life intrudes on a Tuesday when a maintenance call goes out over the PA about a water main leak near the old park. It’s the sort of municipal disruption that eats the morning, that snarls after-school commuting and requires municipal coordination—and, crucially, a place where civic systems fray and criminals like to slip through. He finds himself drawn to the edge of the problem like iron to a lodestone. There’s no grand rationale beyond that innate, stupid, relentless sense that when something goes wrong, someone needs to fix it.
At Midtown High, he navigates corridors like a riverboat pilot—small turns, quick corrections, an ear for collision. He’s good at chemistry because he likes making things combine and behave predictably; he’s not yet comfortable with the alchemy of social currency. His backpack is filled with notebooks and a lunch he forgot to eat in the pre-dawn scramble. In class, he writes equations in the margins and doodles spider legs that bend into neat, geometric patterns. The teacher calls on him; he answers with the soft confidence of someone who knows the material but is weary of the spotlight.
The suit is folded neatly in a thrift-store bag with tissue paper between webbed fingers and mask, a talisman and a weight. He dresses slowly, fingers tracing seams as if memorizing a map of contour lines and stress points. The costume isn't simply cloth; it's a contract he signs every time he steps out. Tonight’s patchwork bears the faint scorch of a previous skirmish in the shoulder, a spider-shaped pattern of browned nylon where an infrared beam found purchase. He runs a palm over it and feels the hum of a different life waiting just beneath his skin.