[READER BEWARE! If you haven't seen
Spider-Man: Into/Across the Spider-Verse
, this might not be the stroke story for you! Spoilers abound! Not just for those flicks, but for Marvel lore at large and the Little Black Duck's other Tales to Admonish!]
SPIDER-GWEN
Issue No. 121
"SPOT Checks & SILK Stalkings!"
** SELF-EDITOR'S NOTE: This scene takes place during the events of
Spider-Gwen
#65, "Team Up with the ULTIMATE Spider-Man!" -LBD **
"That costume is pretty tight," Miles Morales said to Gwen Stacy once they'd been on the Hudson Valley Explorer Express bound for Queens for all of fifteen minutes.
"Excuse me?" she scoffed.
As Spider-Woman, Gwen had just bailed this absolute newbie and his has-been quasi-mentor out of a disastrous raid on Alchemax, the research facility that had built the collider that'd flung her into this off-kilter slice of reality. Nothing young Mr. Morales had done out in the woods during his superhero debut had really inspired a lot of confidence... and now he was, what, hitting on her? Again?!
Okay, sure, when Gwen had first met the guy back at his bizarro Brooklyn version of Visions Academy, she might have been a little flirty, but that was just to gain his trust until she could figure out what the heck was going on with the whole different universe thing she was going through.
No, wait. That sounded so mercenary. Gwen wasn't like that. Mary Jane Watson, the lead singer in her band, was like that.
It's not like Miles wasn't funny. And maybe even kind of a little bit cute in a twenty-first century Urkel sort of way. But she'd thought that before she had to shave off a huge swath of her hair because he couldn't stop sticking to it. And way before someone told her that he was a friggin' freshman!
Gross.
Seriously, what was a freshman doing in AP Physics II? And the way the kid always stared at her. That constant hopeful gleam since she'd laughed at his awful joke about relativity. Gwen didn't need him getting the wrong idea.
When they boarded the bus after fleeing Alchemax's undeniably beautiful Saratoga County campus, she'd only sat across the row from Morales because she didn't want to sit anywhere near that other Spider-Guy. It was weird enough that Spider-Woman was a dude in this universe, and even crazier that Spider-
Man
was some version of her best friend. Seeing blond, studly, superhero Peter Parker all over the news in this demented dimension was a trip. Seeing sad, middle-aged, kind-of-given-up Peter Parker in the flesh was something else entirely... A little too unbelievably real.
For over a year, Gwen had woken each morning with the fervent doomed hope that she might see Peter Parker's face one more time. So of course, that could only come in the form of some warped monkey's paw wish. Classic Stacy luck.
"That costume's tight," Miles told her again. "I mean, it's
dope
, you know?" He frowned. "Does that mean something different where you're from?"
Oh.
"No," Gwen said, unclenching a little. "It almost means the same thing."
"Love that black and white thing you got going," he went on. "And the fuchsia and robin egg highlights? Chef's kiss. For real."
"Thanks?" Nobody had ever complimented Gwen on her spider-suit before. At least not that she knew of. All the comments on the
Daily Bugle
articles about Spider-Woman on her world ranged from vulgar death threats to uncomfortably sexual assertions about her body, so she'd learned pretty early on to stop reading them. The headlines were bad enough on their own.
"Don't get me wrong," Miles continued, looking down at his cheap store-bought Spidey Halloween costume. "The red and blue is classic for a reason, but when I'm Spider-Man, I'mma do it different. I'm thinking, like, all black, but with these big white eyes, and this wraparound white spider on my chest and back."
"That could be cool," she agreed.
Sure, back then, Gwen was still mad about her hair, but that was before she made it back home thanks to Miles, and everyone, even her dad, told her how cool and "punk rock" it looked and she just pretended like she'd done it on purpose. Besides, it wasn't really the hair that was bothering her back on the bus. What actually cheesed Gwen off was that she'd realized he was trying to put some stupid move on her back at school when the whole thing with her hair got messy. Ned Leeds had tried that same shit with her once back at
her
Visions Academy, and he'd ended up flipped over her head, too. And that was
before
Gwen had been bitten by a radioactive spider.
Whoever told Miles that crap would work on women was either an idiot or the smoothest criminal...
Miles had tried Uncle Aaron's dumb shoulder touch thing, and not only had it failed to work, it'd been a complete disaster. The F in fiasco. How could he have known he'd get his fingers stuck in the hot new girl's hair? How was that a thing he was dealing with right now?
The shoulder touch hadn't worked, so, with the shocking revelation that they were both spider-powered people out of the way -- some obvious common ground -- Miles was going with the Rio Morales Method: "Just be yourself, little man," his mom would say. "Don't be like every other brother out there, always playing, always hustling. You know what works? Truth. A connection."
Miles was choosing to ignore the rest of that conversation.
"So that's how Dad got your attention?" he'd asked her. "He was just himself?"
"Exactly,
mijo
," Rio insisted. "No games, no moves. He just strolled up to me all confident, put his hand on my shoulder and said, 'Hey.' And the way he looked at me?" His mother smiled at the memory. "That was it. I fell in love."
So Miles had told Gwanda -- No,
Gwen
. Her real name was Gwen, right?-- that he dug her costume, because he did. Now he was trying to think of something else to say. Something else true. All he'd come up with was,
"Hi, I'm Miles Morales. I might pee my pants if you don't talk to me."
That probably wasn't going to fly. "So there's this doughnut place in Bushwick on Humboldt..." he started to tell her instead, shooting his shot.
Oh, god, he's asking me out,
Gwen panicked. "So, what was on this computer that you two needed from Alchemax so bad?" she asked, fending him off. But what she really wanted to know was how he knew how much she loved doughnuts.
The kid took it as well as he could. Miles just told her about the collider and this override key that apparently 80s-baby Spider-guy had broken somehow, so they needed to make a new one. Then he told her he was sorry about Peter...
Her
Peter. The one who'd died on her world. The reason she didn't make friends anymore.
Gwen had forgotten she'd even told him about all that. It was just so weird being in a place you didn't belong. When nothing made any sense, you could say anything. Miles seemed to understand that, which made him easier to talk to than she liked to admit.
Things happened pretty fast after they got off the bus. New spider-folks, surprise villain attacks,
et cetera
. Standard Spider-Woman stuff, really. Except for Miles. Gwen had always thought that he had potential, but he really stepped up. When everyone gave up on him -- everyone who should have given him a chance... everyone who should have stood by him... even her -- he still pulled it together, showing up out of nowhere to save the day in this repurposed red and black costume -- not the black and white he'd described, but it was still pretty cool.
Which is why, after it was all over and she returned to her universe, safe and sound more or less, it didn't even take a whole week for Gwen to find herself wishing she'd just gone to that doughnut shop. She still felt that way four years later.
** See? All characters are 18 or over for the upcoming sexy bits! -LBD **
Gwen was always a little wary of these autonomous multiversal jumps when she got the chance to really think about them. So many members of the Spider-Society were nerdy scientists, and there was a running theory that every time you punched one of these divets in the space-time continuum, there was a trifurcating quantum shift that split you into up to three different variants of yourself that would all co-exist in fragile parallel lives until or unless one version of events stabilized. So, there was a one-in-three chance that you'd end up in some tiny bubble universe with subtle changes you wouldn't even notice, a temporary triplicate of yourself in a flashpoint transience of unlikely possibility that could cease to be at any moment. But in the face of Canon Killers, ending up in one of these fractal anomaly-natured finite inter-cosmoses -- there had to be a shorter name for that, right? -- was a relatively minor concern. It wasn't a
prevailing
theory or anything, and hypothetically, if it happened, you wouldn't know until it was too late.
Besides, Gwen had smaller, but much more annoying fish to fry.
"Jessica gave you the 1610 job?" Silk jeered at Gwen when she almost bumped into her on her way out of the assignment bureau on Earth-928, Nueva York. Cindy Moon, the spider-jerk of some dimension Gwen couldn't remember -- or was she the tertiary spider-person of one of the over spidered-strands that made her redundant? -- never just said "Hi," to her. It was always some accusation. "I assume you're backing up Agent 138," Cindy sighed. "Do we really need two spiders on that?"