Peter Parker (
st_arkintern) wrote2018-07-17 09:54 pm
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Tony Stark Voice Test
When Peter Parker texts Happy, it's in a panic.
Happy
HAPPY
Happy this is important!
I really need Tony's help
May knows I'm Spider-Man
She's freaking out right now
And when she freaks out I freak out
And I'm freaking out now too
Happy
Please tell Tony I need to talk to him
Peter looks down at his phone, waiting for Happy's response. There's nothing. He tries to be patient. Minutes go by with nothing. For a brief moment, he considers texting him again, but just as he's about to thumb in another message his phone vibrates.
UNKNOWN NUMBER
Peter takes a breath and presses his finger against the green Accept Call button, then swipes right.
"Hello?"
Happy
HAPPY
Happy this is important!
I really need Tony's help
May knows I'm Spider-Man
She's freaking out right now
And when she freaks out I freak out
And I'm freaking out now too
Happy
Please tell Tony I need to talk to him
Peter looks down at his phone, waiting for Happy's response. There's nothing. He tries to be patient. Minutes go by with nothing. For a brief moment, he considers texting him again, but just as he's about to thumb in another message his phone vibrates.
UNKNOWN NUMBER
Peter takes a breath and presses his finger against the green Accept Call button, then swipes right.
"Hello?"
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Peter presses his lips together. He's not sure he wants to know the answer to this question.
"Do you trust me?"
He thinks that Tony does; he wouldn't give him the suit back if he didn't. But there's still that lingering doubt that if he did trust him, it was tentative -- that as soon as he screwed up, he'd take the suit away again.
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He was at a point in his life where he knew that actions weren't always enough. When he was developing the Binarily Augmented Retro-Framing, he had to dig deep to acknowledge all the things he wished he had said to his father upon hindsight. No less than that, all the things he wished his father had said.
"I trust you to do the greenhorn thing and make mistakes. God knows the Avengers do. You'd think literal gods would know better than us mere mortals, right?" Tony's mind went back to the Asgardian he hadn't seen in years. "Thing is, I trust you to work hard to fix them."
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He should have believed that Tony trusted him then.
Peter tries to open his mouth to say something, but the first attempt gets stuck somewhere in his throat. He tries again, and this time the words come out easily.
"I won't let you down, Mr. Stark," Peter says solemnly.
Peter briefly presses his lips together, trying to reign in the excitement and pride welling inside of him; he's sure that his enthusiasm irritated Happy sometimes, and he doesn't want it to irritate Tony.
"You really think I can be an Avenger someday?"
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He checked his watch. It was only 5, so they had a good hour to solidify the game plan.
"If I pretended I was a responsible parent, I'm guessing some things I'd want include making sure you didn't fall behind on your homework. Fair place to start?"
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"Yeah, and... probably answering my phone." Peter pauses there, but only for a moment. "It's not always something I can do, though."
He'd been really distracted when people were trying to call him when he was on the ferry. But he couldn't just ignore people, either. Not without making May or anyone else panicked or worried.
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While Tony was on track to graduate summa cum laude from MIT and inherit a Fortune 500 company by the time he was Peter's age, he at least had an appreciation for the idea of living a normal life in the boy's case. And more than that, it was more than true he had violently enabled Peter's descent into chronic heroism. To be the one mentoring him to get halfway "on track" was ironic at best.
"Live the "best years of your life" and all that. Has anyone actually told you that, kid? Never listen to someone who peaked in high school. Anyway, you know what I mean."
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"Yeah, yeah... of course."
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"Okay. Different approach. I'm Aunt May. Persuade me."
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And perhaps worse, looking at Tony and trying to imagine May was almost impossible. They didn't look or act anything like one another.
"Okay," Peter says, taking a breath. He looks down at his hands, tries to put himself in the I'm really talking to May and not Tony mindset, then turns to look at Tony.
"May, I wanted to talk to you about the whole Spider-Man thing."
That seems like a good place to start.
"I know that you're worried about me. I know I'd be worried about me, too." It's true. "Especially because of everything that happened with Ben."
That had been a big part of why he'd kept it secret from her in the first place.
"But I really thought about it for a long time. Even before I decided to be Spider-Man," he says, "and I think if I can help other people, I need to."
This is somewhat embarrassing to admit to Tony, but he really is trying.
"So... I really just want to talk about the things you're worried about and figure out if there's some way we can meet halfway."
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"This," He gestured all around Peter, "Is not up for discussion." His words were quiet, but they struck like knives.
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And then Tony opens his mouth.
And then Peter wishes he hadn't.
Immediately, his mind is scrambling for the perfect words. He's sifting through his mental filing cabinets of May knowledge, frantically trying to figure out what she'd want to hear.
But he knows that the only thing she'd really want was for him to just agree with her.
But he can't.
"I know you don't want to discuss it," Peter begins, "but I want to because I think that it --"
Peter swallows. He hates the idea of clashing with May.
"I think that it's important for you to know why I was doing all this, and why I was doing it behind your back."
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"Is there a good reason why the Avengers needed a high-schooler to do their dirty work for them?! All this--this sneaking around, lying to my face, I expected some of that as you got older but THIS? It's like you'd gone off and joined a cult!"
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"I," he starts, and he can't seem to figure out what word he should use after that. "It's not like that."
Gone is the deliberate composure of a few minutes ago.
"I knew you were going to be afraid for me if you knew what I was doing," he argues. "I didn't want you to be afraid, but I still wanted to help people."
He swallows.
"No one made me do this," he says. "I chose to do it."
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"You could be the most noble person in existence, but it won't change the fact you're still young! And that's what scares me. Not just the thought of you tossing yourself into danger, but the thought of someone taking advantage of that good will." Tony was closed off, arms folded across his stomach.
"The suit? Stays locked up. Anyone saying it's a good idea to wear it? Staying away. I don't care how good a grant they're paying out."
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"Didn't you tell me that age was just a number?" he asks. "What does it matter that I'm young?"
Peter doesn't think it matters, even if other people think it does.
"Someone's going to take advantage of me eventually," he says. "Even if you take away the suit, nothing's going to change that. It's still going to happen."
This much is true. Peter can't believe he'll go through the rest of his life without having someone take advantage of him.
"And I can't let that stop me from being able to help people. I can't. And even if you take the suit away..."
Peter stops there.
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Tony let the question hang in the air, locking Peter into a glare that challenged his will and dared him to say another word.
"It means that no matter how strong you are, no matter how many bad guys you take on, no matter how many superheroes you rub elbows with, I am responsible for you. This is not punishment for lying to me. This is me doing whatever I can to prevent you running off and getting yourself killed."
Tony chewed the insides of his lip. His own adrenaline was pumping.
"I know why you lied, I know why you're doing what you're doing. At the end of the day, maybe I can't stop you. But if something happened to you?" Tony threw up his hands before letting them fall back down. "...I couldn't go on, Peter."
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Emotionally, it doesn't feel like it is.
He knows, even as he fights against it, that this should be the one time where he should be calm and cool and practiced because those are all the things he's going to need to be when May comes through the doors and finds him and Tony waiting for her.
But he's not calm, because when he hears Tony say these things, it's like he's not just May saying them, it's like Tony's saying them too.
"Why couldn't you just support me instead?" he asks. "Why not instead of stopping me, you help me? I know I'm going to do this and you even say you can't stop me, so what good is telling me no going to do for either of us?"
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Tony broke the stillness, approaching Peter slowly, and lowering himself into the space beside the boy on the bottom bunk.
"Why this?" He asked, watching the side of Peter's face. "Why not something else? There are so many other ways out there to help others aside from being a superhero. With your smarts...you could be any of them."
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People like Tony.
"But there's only one person that can do what I can do."
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"...Alright." He was the first to break, turning his eyes towards his knees.
"Alright, kid." Tony enunciated his words with a sort of finality that was concretely him. "That was...I think you've got the basics down. Maybe a little less combatting but I think we've got something workable."
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"Thank you," Peter says breathily.
He's sure Tony never had this problem before; no one would ever take his suit away.
Peter looks down at his hands for a second, then back over at Tony.
"I watched the YouTube video of the press conference," he says. Peter'd been fairly young when Iron Man first became a thing. "What'd you do after everyone found out?"
May isn't everyone, but this is probably as close as Tony got to someone he loved finding out. Maybe Ms. Potts knew before any of them; maybe Happy, too. But Peter can't be sure.
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"Well. The government immediately attempted to seize my work as I slowly died from metal poisoning." Another pause. "It all worked out in the end, of course."
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But there's one thing that Peter doesn't know.
"You were dying?"
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"Really hit rock bottom with that one. Bad scene." He was so off hand with the way he described those days, it was as if he were describing a somewhat embarrassing bender.
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He wants to tell Tony that he's glad he's okay, but he doesn't want to sound too sentimental. Peter doesn't know why he's not okay with saying it to Tony, because he'd be okay with saying it to anyone else. Maybe it's because Tony's not very sentimental and he's not entirely sure how he'd react to it.
He swallows back his reservations and just says it.
"I'm really glad you're okay," he tells him. "I'm sure it can't be easy being an Avenger sometimes."
And that might have been part of why he rejected Tony's offer; he knew he wasn't ready for that sort of responsibility yet. Just taking care of Queens was enough for awhile.
He still had plenty of time.
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