Wᩚeᩚlᩚcᩚoᩚmᩚeᩚ tᩚoᩚ mᩚyᩚ pᩚaᩚgᩚeᩚ
She/Her
Dreamer and Reader/Writer
h
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Love Begins
No title available
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

ellievsbear
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
noise dept.
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

#extradirty
ojovivo
will byers stan first human second
Jules of Nature
RMH
Misplaced Lens Cap
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
sheepfilms
Keni
YOU ARE THE REASON
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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@eidrif
Wᩚeᩚlᩚcᩚoᩚmᩚeᩚ tᩚoᩚ mᩚyᩚ pᩚaᩚgᩚeᩚ
She/Her
Dreamer and Reader/Writer
Richard Parker liked black jack.
Peter remembers sitting at the dinner table late into the evening, a cigarette between his father’s lips and a deck of cards in his hand. He taught Peter the rules, made him play, bought him ice cream when he won.
Peter doesn’t like thinking about what happened when he lost.
The point is, they felt like a family. It was just them, playing a game. That’s what other kids talked about in school, the kids whose mothers weren’t dead. The only time Peter remembers his father being proud of him was when he invited some friends around and Peter beat them all to oblivion.
Richard ordered pizza that night.
So it was not surprising when Peter developed a gambling addiction young. He was eventually taken from his father and placed with Ben and May, but it was hard to stop himself from thinking of cards every time he saw a quarter on the street.
He got through it, mostly. He tried convincing Ned that it was fun, but Ned didn’t like the way Peter got genuinely angry. He didn’t like the way Peter would keep pushing him to bet more.
And it fizzled out. Mostly because he didn’t have a choice. May found a betting app on his phone and quickly got Ben to change the Wi-Fi setting so they were all blocked. He was far too young to enter a casino and his best friend didn’t want to.
Enter Tony Stark. And Tony was having a party, and the party needed a theme.
Vegas.
And Tony jokes that he’s allowed $10 to go wild and when it’s gone, it’s gone.
And from that night forward, Peter feels like he’s back at the kitchen table, betting his savings from the piggy bank just so his father would look at him. And he doesn’t want his father to ever stop looking at him.
So he decided to never stop playing.
infinity gap #2
lunch break
(peter called him a bigback 2 seconds before he took this photo)
if you could be any hero (and i mean ANY) for a day, who would you choose
hawkeye cause he does jack shit. right, mr barton? :)
mY bLInKiEs
Irondad oneshot-Thermospidey
Peter Parker & Tony Stark
Summary:
Peter can’t thermoregulate. Now that is usually not a problem, even it’s the middle of winter like now. Unfortunately, Peter’s heater broke.
Great.
Will Tony save him in time? Will it hurt their growing relationship or will it make them stronger?
A/N: Check out my acc on ao3 Eidrif!
Peter didn’t know what was wrong until it was too late.
It was January and even though Peter knew by this time he can’t thermoregulate, he still went on patrol.
Because when the snow is knee-deep people will need help even more. And it was fine anyways.
The suit that Tony build for him, did not only include his very own AI that would surely alert him if something was wrong, but also an often used heater that Tony nicely demonstrated for him when the vulture dropped him in waters, that were nothing in cold compared to Peter’s freezing hands right now.
He shot a web out of his self-made devices and with that, left the guy who was in the act of trying to rob a sandwich shop, glued to a wall.
After a quick confirmation with the shopkeeper, the cops were called and spidey swung away.
Peter stopped at a snowy roof, taking a short break before jumping back in action.
He rubbed his suit-covered hands together and exhaled on them, unfortunately the motion was more for comfort since the suit also covered his mouth.
“Peter, it seems like your suits heater is having some trouble activating. Your temperature is dropping.”
Well. That wasn’t too good.
But as long as Peter didn’t noticed any drastic symptoms, he’d be fine.
“Alright thanks for informing me.” Peter deflected, “Get me into the police radio again Karen?”
“Of course Peter” the AI didn’t push further and patched him through the radio, but her answer seemed clipped.
The kid quickly started swinging to keep a man from attacking a woman in an alley.
Luckily Karen immediately identified the hidden knife behind his back—the fight had been nothing.
But when Peter was about to shoot a web to restrain his arms to his body, no familiar “thwip!” And he had to press twice so the web would finally do its job.
“That’s weird” he audibly muttered before climbing a small house and sitting on the roofs edge.
He inspected his web shooters and came to a quick conclusion. They had lightly frosted and prevented the finger of Peter to properly activate the shooting of the webs.
“Karen can you… maybe unfreeze the buttons?” But all he got was a slightly more robotic voice than usual repeating: “Heater unit-protocol freezing spider-baby unresponsive.”
If Peter wasn’t so worried right now, he might’ve scoffed or laughed at the ridiculous protocol name that Tony made, but he furrowed his brow and made a decision.
“Maybe I should return to the tower for today”, Peter murmured and quickly rubbed his web shooters back to the point of them working.
He swung away—really feeling the cold claim his entire body now.
But mid swing he’s started shivering. The web he was swinging on, shook and Peter could only throw himself on a construction crane in the last second.
He wobbled before sitting down and activating his sticky power. Suddenly, The boy was startled by Karen speaking up again.
“Last attempt at patching error code to Boss. Initiating shut down to preserve Energy.”
And with that she was quiet.
But Peter was getting tired anyways. He didn’t question it and he didn’t need to.
He just needed to lie down for a sec. And with that thought, the kids eyes fell shut.
On a snowy crane in the middle of queens.
~~~~~~~
“Dum-E! Hey get your hands off that!” Tony scolded the robot back at the stark tower in his lab.
The saddened robot let down his pincers while backing clicking sounds.
Tony just scoffed and wanted to turn back to the project he was currently tinkering on, when he was interrupted.
“Boss it seems like Pete’s AI has shut down in necessity.”
Tony immediately perked up at that.
“What why?” FRIDAY tell me more.”
“I just got an error code patched through by the AI. Peters heater malfunctioned and Karen shut herself down in order to preserve more Energy.”
As soon as FRIDAY finished talking, Tony activated the nanotechnology suit and flew out of a window.
He was panicking. The kid couldn’t Thermoregulate. That was exactly why he built the heater in the first place.
And it was not supposed to malfunction.
“Can’t this thing fly faster” He yelled while tracking the last position of his kid.
His repulsors were glowing brighter as he accelerated. Finally he saw the silhouette of the little kid.
Tony didn’t land so much as crash onto the crane.
“Peter!” His voice cracked through the helmet comms even though there was no one to hear it but himself. The kid was slumped against the metal, half-buried in snow, too still. Way too still.
For a split second, Tony froze.
Then he moved.
The nanotech peeled back from his hands as he dropped to his knees, grabbing Peter by the shoulders. The suit was cold—too cold—and stiff under his grip.
“Hey, hey, kid, this is not funny. You don’t get to nap on industrial equipment. That’s, like, rule one of things I definitely told you.”
No response.
Tony’s chest tightened. He pressed two fingers against Peter’s neck. There—faint, but there. Slow.
“Okay. Okay, you’re good. You’re good,” he muttered, more for himself than for Peter.
The mask reformed just enough for a scan. Readouts flickered across his HUD, each one worse than the last.
“Severe hypothermia,” FRIDAY supplied, calm and clinical in his ear. “Core temperature critically low.”
“Yeah, I can see that, Fri.”
Tony swallowed hard, then carefully—far more carefully than anyone would ever believe he could be—scooped Peter up into his arms. The kid felt wrong. Light. Limp.
“Hang on, kid. I got you.”
The suit sealed around them both, generating as much heat as it could without shocking Peter’s system. Tony didn’t wait another second. He launched.
The flight back felt too long. It was only minutes, but every second dragged, stretched thin by the sound of Peter’s uneven breathing over the suit’s sensors.
“Come on, kid. Stay with me. You still owe me, like, twelve homework assignments you promised you’d finish. And I am not explaining this to May.”
No answer.
Tony pushed the suit harder.
The tower came into view and he didn’t bother with a clean landing this time either. He blasted straight through the open platform and into the med bay.
“FRIDAY, prep everything. Hypothermia protocol, now.”
“Already in progress, Boss.”
The med table slid into position as Tony laid Peter down, hands hovering for just a moment like he didn’t want to let go.
Then reality snapped back in.
“Alright, let’s fix you up.”
Mechanical arms descended, carefully cutting away sections of the suit. Tony worked alongside them, faster than usual but precise, peeling back layers to get to Peter.
The kid’s skin was pale. Lips tinged blue.
Tony’s jaw clenched.
“Easy, easy…” he murmured, even though Peter couldn’t hear him. Warm blankets. Controlled heat. IV lines. Oxygen.
“Core temperature rising slowly,” FRIDAY reported.
“Not fast enough.”
He stayed right there, one hand hovering near Peter’s shoulder, like he needed the contact but didn’t quite trust himself not to mess something up.
“Kid, you are in so much trouble,” Tony said quietly. “You don’t get to scare me like that. That’s my thing.”
Peter didn’t stir.
Tony exhaled shakily, dragging a hand down his face before resting it briefly against Peter’s hair, careful, almost hesitant.
“…just—yeah. Just wake up, okay?”
The machines kept beeping. The warmth slowly returned.
And Tony didn’t leave his side for a second.
Time passed in slow, careful increments.
The storm outside softened to a quiet fall, the kind that blanketed the city instead of burying it. Inside the med bay, everything was warm, steady, controlled.
Peter stirred.
It was small at first. A twitch of his fingers under the blankets, a faint shift of his head. Then a quiet, rough inhale that didn’t sound quite right but was stronger than before.
Tony noticed immediately.
He straightened in his chair, which had very much not been there earlier but definitely was now, dragged close enough to the bed that his knee pressed against it.
“Hey,” he said, voice low but alert. “Easy. Don’t go doing any dramatic wake-up scenes. We’re keeping this boring.”
Peter’s eyes fluttered open, unfocused at first. The ceiling lights were too bright. Everything felt… heavy. Warm, but heavy.
“…Mr. Stark?” His voice came out hoarse, barely there.
Tony let out a breath he’d been holding for what felt like hours.
“Yeah. Yeah, I’m here.”
Peter blinked slowly, trying to piece things together. Snow. Patrol. The crane.
“Oh.” A pause. “…I messed up.”
Tony huffed softly, but there was no bite in it.
“Wow. Look at that. Near-death experience and we still get the world’s fastest self-diagnosis.”
Peter gave the smallest, tired huff of a laugh, then winced a little at the effort.
“Sorry,” he mumbled. “I thought the heater would— I didn’t think it would just… stop.”
Tony leaned forward, elbows on his knees, hands clasped tight for a second before he forced them to relax.
“Yeah, well, it wasn’t supposed to,” he said. Then, quieter, “That’s on me.”
Peter frowned slightly. “No, it’s not. I should’ve come back when Karen said—”
“Peter.”
That stopped him.
Tony rarely used that tone. Not loud. Not sharp. Just… firm.
“I built the suit,” Tony continued, calmer now but no less serious. “I’m the one who put you out there with something that could fail. So yeah, I’m in that equation.”
Peter looked down at the blanket, fingers fidgeting weakly with the edge.
“…still my fault too.”
Tony exhaled through his nose, then reached out, very briefly pressing a hand against the side of Peter’s head, brushing back messy curls before pulling away like it hadn’t happened.
“Kid, you almost froze to death on a crane,” he said quietly. “I got a shutdown message from your AI and no signal after that. Do you have any idea what that does to a person?”
Peter glanced up, a bit startled by that.
Tony shook his head, a humorless half-smile tugging at his mouth.
“Don’t answer that. It’s rhetorical. The answer is ‘a lot.’”
Silence settled for a moment.
Then Tony leaned back slightly, looking at him properly.
“I need you to promise me something.”
Peter tensed a little at that, but nodded. “…okay.”
“If something’s wrong like that again—gear, suit, you, anything—you stop.” Tony held his gaze. “I don’t care if it’s the middle of a patrol, I don’t care if you think you can handle it, I don’t care if it’s ‘just one more thing.’ You stop and you come back. No arguing, no pushing through.”
Peter hesitated.
Not long. Just enough to show he was thinking about it.
“…what if someone needs help?” he asked quietly.
Tony didn’t snap. Didn’t deflect.
“They will,” he said simply. “There’s always going to be someone who needs help. But you can’t help anyone if you’re not there to do it.”
Peter swallowed.
“…yeah.”
Tony tilted his head slightly. “That didn’t sound like a promise.”
Peter huffed faintly, then looked back at him, more serious this time.
“I promise.”
Tony watched him for a second longer, like he was checking for cracks in that answer.
Then he nodded once.
“Good.”
Another pause, softer this time.
“…you really scared me,” Tony admitted, almost under his breath.
Peter’s expression shifted, guilt flashing across his face.
“I’m sorry.”
“Yeah,” Tony said, but there was no heat in it now. Just relief. “Don’t make it a habit.”
Peter gave a small, tired smile.
“I’ll try.”
“Not try,” Tony corrected lightly, leaning back in his chair again. “Do. I am way too young for this level of stress.”
Peter let out a quiet laugh, eyes already starting to drift shut again, this time from exhaustion instead of cold.
“…you’re old,” he murmured.
Tony snorted.
“Go to sleep, Underoos.”
And this time, when Peter’s eyes closed, Tony didn’t panic.
He just stayed right where he was, listening to the steady rhythm of the monitors, making sure it stayed that way.
+ very much not morning people
“At least Tony died before he forgot who Peter was!”
If Tony was alive NOBODY WOULD’VE FORGOTTEN PETER
If Tony was alive, Beck never would’ve been able to trick Peter, and expose his identity which led to the events of No Way Home.
AND THATS WHAT MAKES IT HURT SO MUCH MORE.
If Tony didn’t die, May would still be alive and MJ and Ned would remember him.
Tony died so Peter could live. And yet, his death is what made his life fall apart.
…?but Tony’s alive, Mj, Ned and Peter are at MIT and Happy and May just got happily married?