making gooner art of phainon cured my art blockshe/her -- 18
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saw this on my tiktok fyp and CREAMED MY PANTS
dog tricks ft. phainon
so uhh this is not exactly a comic, just a short fun vid inspired by that tiktok audio heheheh wnjoy
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im drawing someone other than phainon NO WAY. i need 2 build my mydei...
#mydei is stealing my boyfriend away from me please send help#hsr#hsr mydei#mydei#mydeimos#honkai star rail mydei#amphoreus#honkai star rail#digital art#made with krita#fanart#mydei fanart
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PEAK AU. (my art is featured hehheheh)
art by @rxstrife @miyorina @luxstring ! (in order!)
⋆。° ✮ : you're buddy buddy with phainon now. he asks you to see a movie with him, but why are you in his car— on his lap??
⋆。° ✮ : well!!! here it isssss, sorry it took so long. hehe. BUT HERE IT IS AAHHHHH!!!
⋆。° ✮ cw ; HEAVY SMUT GUYS, phainon being a weirdo and yapping during *** 😔, drool, biting, licking, ummmm cussing, ermmm, this is just u n phainon being freak4freak, also fluff at the end!!
Meeting you was fate, maybe. Destined once he moved here. He didn’t mean for it to happen. He thought it would all be simple, but meeting you altered all of his choices. It all started when you knocked on his door.
He opened it, thinking nothing of it. That’s when he saw you, your eyes peering up at him like you had just seen a celebrity. It was cute how you were clearly gawking at him, your eyes watching his muscles flex, or how he smiled. He couldn’t get enough.
When he came over to borrow some sugar, he couldn’t get enough.
All of his shitty attempts at flirting being met with soft stutters and your eyes widening, he couldn’t get enough.
It drives him crazy, he thinks. He wonders if you know what you do to him. To top it all off, this cute girl who drives him insane is a pervert.
He found out when he was changing, the thought of closing his curtains completely slipped his mind due to tiredness from work. He sighs as his sore muscles stretch over his head, his brows tightly knitted together.
Something in him felt like he was being watched.
He turned to face the window and was met with you, timidly looking at him through the window with your hand presumably in your pants. He looks away quickly, trying not to let it be known that he saw you. Then he smiles, grins even.
It’s a fuzzy feeling.
The feeling you get when you lie down in bed and cover yourself in your warm blanket after a cold, tiring day.
He can’t get enough of it. So he follows you around like a dog. Waiting for you to arrive home so he can make up an awful excuse of why you have to be right next to him at all times. Is he moving too quick? Maybe. Does he want to slow down? No.
That’s why he’s here with you, a movie playing on the big screen as you both sit in the dark. Popcorn in his lap and a soda in his hand.
Yes, he asked you to go to the movies with him.
You lean over with a pout, hooking your arm around his– he hopes you don’t notice how he stiffens up.
“This movie is scary, Phainon…” you whisper against his ear as he leans down toward you, “It’s okay, sweetheart. I’ll protect you.” he replies, still whispering.
You huff, “Yeah, right..” before getting comfortable in your seat.
His heart hurts from how fast it’s beating. Your scent floods his nose, and chills run up his spine. He feels vulnerable, like any moment you could take advantage of him and do anything you want.
He tries not to think.
It's been thirty minutes of hands brushing, and you grabbing popcorn from his lap. The popcorn is getting low and he's getting wary, wondering if he should move it without saying anything? Would your hand graze his lap? Maybe touch his—
You jump at the movie suddenly and wrap your arms around his arm. He stiffens before looking at you, “It's okay.” you whine into his shoulder.
“This movie is really scary! Why would you take me here?”
So you could get scared and cling to him.
“Sorry, it's the only one that was playing when we were both free.”
You huff loudly against his jacket, nuzzling your cheek into it like a little cat. He looks away for a moment, his jeans tightening as he does so. Do you know that you're doing this to him?
The popcorn runs out and he hesitantly places the bucket on the floor. That's when he gets an idea to do it. The famous move.
He stretches his arms up with a small yawn and places his arm behind your chair. Corny but hey, he thinks he did it pretty smoothly.
You're frozen, the only thing on your body moving is your foot softly tapping. He senses that you're nervous, and it's cute. He taps your shoulder, and your face swings to him with wide eyes.
“You okay, sweetheart?”
You stutter.
“Um, ye-yeah. I'm fine.”
There's screams coming from the movie but he doesn't pay attention to it, your face is all he can look at. He examines it slowly as if to burn the image into his brain.
“This movie sucks,” he starts, fingers tracing shapes onto your shoulder. He's about to combust due to how nervous he is, but he won't show it.
He moves his face a bit closer, a smile creeping up on his lips— “Wanna go back to my place, maybe?”
It’s silent between the both of you for a moment, a small ‘huh?’ falling from your open lips.
He stifles a laugh.
“You heard me. I wanna take you home, you know?”
“Like.. for… that?”
He presses his forehead to your cheek and sighs against it, “I just, I– I don’t. I don’t know, okay? I just, want you at home. At my home.”
His voice his shaky, the nerves creeping into him like a spider on its web.
“We’ve known each other for a while now, and I– Just.”
The shrieks coming from the screen fade into the back as he looks up at you.
“Can we just, try it out?”
You stare at his face. His eyes burning into yours. His nose is so close, breath fanning against your lips. You can barely think. He can barely breathe.
“Yes, fuck, yes please.” you finally manage out, and his whole soul eases.
You both shuffle out of the movie theatre in silence, his heavy breathing the only thing that you can hear as you get into the car. He shuts the door and blinks rapidly as he forces himself to smile despite the anxiety coursing through his veins.
You feel it too.
His jeans are tight, and he doesn’t want to say it, but he is excited. What will happen first? Would you suck him off maybe? Give him a handjob?
He’s not sure if he can handle feeling someone else’s touch without finishing within seconds, especially if it’s you.
You peer at him through the darkness, each passing street light shimmering off his skin as he passes.
“Do you–”
Your breath is caught in your throat.
“Do I have a condom? Is that what you’re gonna ask?”
You nod.
“At the house, I do. I don’t know if this should be our… first time like that.”
It’s quiet for a bit before you speak again, “What do you mean?” you ask.
“It’s improper,” he laughs out, “I wouldn’t want our first time to be this rushed, you know? I want it to be perfect. Thought out, delicate.” the car slows to a halt at a red light, “It would suck if we rushed this. I don’t wanna rush this.”
You stare, watching as his fingers nervously tap at the wheel.
“Just forget it. Let me take you home.”
“Phainon–”
“We’re rushing this– I’m rushing it. I’m moving too fast. I don’t like it– I don’t–”
“Phainon.”
“What?” he manages out through a shaky breath.
“I know you’re scared. It’s okay, I promise. Let’s just take our time with this whole thing. We don’t have to… have sex… we can just, go to your house and watch a different movie. I just wanna spend the night with you. Okay?”
He stares at you with his brows furrowed, like he’s furiously thinking.
HONK!
He sucks in air and coughs as he looks forward. The light is green. He keeps driving towards his house.
He doesn’t speak. He doesn’t think he can form any words or any thought right now.
“Are you okay?”
“Fine, just a little stressed, and hard.” he laughs as he white knuckles the wheel.
“You’re being oddly honest.”
“Is it turning you on?”
“Yes.” you laugh out, fumbling with your fingers on your lap.
“That’s good, at least I’m doing something right.”
“Does being scared turn you on?” you ask.
“I’d rather not talk about that.”
“Okaayy, how about being scared of me?”
He whispers your name, “Please, stop torturing me. My dick can’t get any harder.”
You giggle. It rings in his ears, and chills crawl up his arms. You’re giggling at him.
“Can I see?”
He audibly groans, leaning his head back into the car and pulling over to the side of the road. He's sweating, it's dripping down the bridge of his nose and coating his jawline.
He's just before the road that leads to your house, on a small dirt road somewhere near a field. You lived in a small country town after all, not much to see.
“You wanna see it?”
You nod, and he unbuckles his seat belt and leans back, “Are you sure?” he asks, one of his hands going to palm himself through the jeans. You sink your teeth into your lower lip as you watch.
“Isn't it a little fast to see my cock?” he asks again.
You just hum, the words escaping you at the moment.
He looks at your face, his lips tight before tilting it to the side with a soft whine, “You wanna touch it?”
“It won’t be too fast for me to touch it?”
He laughs for a second, reaching over and leaning his seat back as far as it can go. His jaw tightens for a moment, reaching upwards to turn the engine off before looking back at you.
It’s like time stops for a moment. All he can see is your face in the dark, illuminated by the moon’s tender glow– if it wasn’t for his hand on his clothed cock he would think that you both would be kissing by now.
He taps his cock with his palm, and your mouth falls open a little, it’s like your eyes can’t choose where to rest.
“Come here. Please?”
He smiles when he hears the soft shuffling and a click from your seatbelt, “On my lap, okay?” you whisper a soft ‘ok’ in response. All he can hear is his heart, the only thing in his brain is the thoughts of feeling your weight on top of him, your scent flooding your nose and your chest pressing against his.
You climb onto his lap, straddling him– his hands now resting on the sides of your thighs. Soft, it burns into his brain– how heavy you are, how smooth your skin is, how warm your body is on his lap. Your hands are against his chest, softly squeezing at his pecs– they squish but he doesn’t care much.
“Your dick… it’s really big…”
“Oh?” he chuckles for a second, blush coating his cheeks and ears, straying down his neck, “He likes you.”
You suck in a breath as you slide your palms down his chest, fingers following the ridges over his shirt. Once you reach his jeans you freeze for a moment before placing two fingers on top of the prominent bulge.
It twitches.
“Mmnn.. Phainon..” you whine, despite no pressure being applied to you yet.
“I know, I know. I..” he sighs as you circle the tip of his cock through his jeans, “I want it out too.”
He guides your hips closer, until his dick presses up against your core. He can’t properly feel it, but the warmth already engulfs him enough to make him groan. Phainon’s body shivers beneath yours and you just watch him with half-lidded eyes.
“You squirm a lot.” you hum out, leaning down to place a kiss on his cheek– he huffs softly.
“Sorry..”
“Mm, it’s okay. It’s cute, I like it.” The softness of your lips presses against his cheek, and he shudders again, whining underneath you. You feel him twitch again between your legs.
“Sooo, you’re a sensitive type…”
“Why are you teasing me?” he groans out, “I’m supposed to be—” he lets out a soft moan when your tongue drags down his neck toward his shoulder, his eyes rolling back into his head– “Dominating you..”
He bucks his hips upward into your heat, digging his fingers into your thighs.
“Such a bad girl,” he huffs into your neck, “getting me all worked up just to tease me.”
You giggle against his neck, your breath tickling his neck and leaving goosebumps.
“You’re the bad one, saying you don’t wanna rush,” you whisper against him, grinding your hips down onto his crotch before placing your fingers against his chest, circling his perky nipples, “yet here you are, acting like a whore.”
He whines. It’s a broken whine, almost like he’s about to cum already.
“Call me that again, please.”
“Whore?”
“Fuck.” he sighs, grinding upwards into your heat repeatedly. He’s being rougher now, and you’re the one moaning against him now.
“Waited so fucking long for this, you know? Seeing you fuck your hand to me getting dressed, or how you look at me when I do yard work. Drives me fucking insane. You have no clue what you do to me.”
“Fuck– Phainon, what– What do I make you do?” you whimper into his neck, the tip of his dick rubbing just right against your clit– your hands fumble against his nipples, but he doesn’t mind.
“You make me–” he moans, “you make me do shit I’ve never even thought of. I– I like.. Kiss my window– when you walk by sometimes, and like, sometimes when you shake my hand– I don’t wash it until I get home so I can rub it on my dick–”
His hips speed up, his eyes squeezing shut before licking mindlessly against your neck, splaying kisses and sucking before speaking again.
“When you told me what body wash you use, I bought it. The first time I opened the body I, fuck– I rubbed it on my dick and used it to jack off. I still have the bag of chips you gave me when I first moved in–” he swallows down a moan before sinking his teeth into your neck. You give a sharp moan before your body shudders underneath his hands, “Fuck– Phainon that was fucking like a month ago–”
“I know–” he groans out, “It’s next to my bed, and I like to look at it before falling asleep, knowing that it was in your house and now it’s in mine— I get so fucking hard when I think about it.”
“Phainon– You’re fucking,” you let out a sharp gasp, feeling the coil in your stomach so close to snapping, almost like he’s ripping it out of you, “so fucking weird!”
“I know, I fucking know. I’m so weird about you, I love sniffing you when we hug— Or jacking off to the pictures you send me in the day, I love it. I fucking love touching myself to you– You drive me insane, so fucking insane.” he rambles, “I’m so fucking close– So fucking close.” he whines into your neck, sinking his teeth into your throat again.
“Me too– Phainon, I,” you swallow down a whimper before speaking, “Remember that time you gave me a plushie because you won it at the claw machine?”
He nods profusely.
“I grind–” you take a second to gulp, “my pussy on it every night, because you gave it to me. It doesn’t even fucking look pink anymore. It looks like a fucking peach– I’ve came on it so many times because, because you gave it to me.”
He shudders beneath you with broken moans, his voice cracking as he borderline humps into you to feel any friction he can possibly get, and in return, you wrap your arms tightly around him and hump him back.
“C-Cumminggg..” he whines into your neck, fingers certainly leaving marks on your skin.
You inhale his scent into your nose, your eyes rolling back into your skull as a smile grows on your lips, drool slipping past and running down his neck, “Me tooooo…”.
You feel the wetness splay across your thighs, sticking to your clothes, and flooding your nose with its potent smell. The smell of Phainon’s cum. “I’m cumming so muuchhh…” he whimpers into you, still messily humping into you.
“It’s okay.. It’s okay, just let it all out for me, okay?”
“Oookkayy..” he manages out between broken whines and whimpers. It takes him a few minutes before his hips finally come to a halt, his head lying against your shoulder as his chest heaves. You stay like that for a while. He opens his eyes finally to see your body laying limp against his, feeling your fingers mindlessly scratching at his head. He lets out a soft hum.
“Do you really do everything you said you did?” you ask quietly, lips tickling his neck.
“I do. You really do drive me insane.” he sighs out, dragging his hands up your back, “You think I’m weird though..” he huffs out.
You giggle against him before speaking, “I think you’re hot and sexy. You make me act like I’ve never seen a man before, it’s funny.”
“Guess we’re both weird.” he laughs out.
“Weirdos being weirdos who also happen to hump each other when horror movies get boring.” you giggle again, and he laughs in return.
You both sit there in the dark car, your thighs covered in cum, and his jeans soiled— but that doesn’t matter because you’re laughing with him. He knows he drive home will be uncomfortable since he came on himself, but that’s okay, because you’re laughing and smiling against his neck like you have no worry in the world.
That’s all he can ask for. That’s all he wants. All he wants is to keep you laughing and smiling just like you are now. Your face tickles his neck, and your hair is a mess, your nails are dragging against his scalp, and the moon is still glowing despite it all.
“Do you wanna sleep over at my house?” he asks. He’s nervous you’ll say no, and he’s even more nervous that you’ll think he’s moving too fast.
“Of course, Phainon. I always wanted to lay in your bed, you know? I dream about the weirdest shit because of you.”
“Like what?”
“Fucking you. With a dick.”
“Mm. That’d be ni–” he catches himself before he says it, “Get off of me, I gotta drive us home.”
You’re giggling the entire time you get off of him and in the midst of getting back into your seats– and getting as comfortable as you can, Phainon ends up accidentally shooting his seat up too fast and slamming his forehead into the wheel. You ask if he’s okay before he says he’s gonna cry because his brain hurts.
You end up laughing the entire drive to his house, saying how he’s going to get weirder because more thoughts of you are shaking around. He brings up the fact you wanna fuck him with a dick, and you bring up the fact he gets hard at a bag of chips.
You win the argument.
After arriving at his house, he runs in first because he’s whining about how it looks like he pissed himself, and you just point and laugh. Once you both get in, he slips and nearly falls into the living room TV, and once again, you’re pointing and laughing.
You take turns taking showers in his bathroom, and you end up wearing one of his sweatshirts from college and some boxers he offered you– you chose not to wear them since the sweatshirt was practically a dress.
You lay on the left side of his bed and giggle to yourself at the bag of chips in front of you. He gets embarrassed about it and ends up throwing them across the room.
“Can we cuddle?” he asks as he scoots closer.
“I can practically feel your hard dick from here.”
“Shut up, I can smell your pussy.”
“You can?!” you shout, and he laughs as he shakes his head no, “Stupid asshole.” You huff and slam your head down onto his pillow. Being surrounded by his scent and being in his house would obviously make you soaked.
He wraps his arms around your waist and pulls you against his chest, laying his face into your hair and borderline ingesting your scent with a loud sniff.
“Ewwwww, dog.”
“I’m hard..”
“I feel it, freak.”
“Okay, now I do smell your pussy.”
It’s silent for a second.
“Jack off and I’ll touch myself?”
“No looking…” he huffs out.
“Okay..”
It is dark in the room after all.
taglist! : @httpshujii @lost-wicked-artist @lov3-ly @aloudice @blushho @aerithsthingss @rxstrife @whatamidoing89 @boycock-boycunt-boyslut @foreverz @emperatris-rinaka @monoclesnapple @panpanstyle @dyingsweetmackerel @stardustbee @diluxama @thebasicbword @comet-kun @killsxu @reminiscingthesea @mei-simp @n8mareee @qiqifruit @miyamizuna @ravinee @nico707 @what-is-wrong-with-everyone @ellslove @youaskedfurret @nayukiyukihira @ren-ren23 @bloodyeterna @my-perfect-machine @minaluvu @ririsdelusionalcorner
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i would soo be a marius girl if luke wasn't my main. this blog is slowly jus gonna become a phainon drabble collection tbh..
#i love phainon#hot sexy men#phainon hsr#phainon fanart#honkai star rail#hsr#phainon#marius von hagen#tears of themis#hoyoverse#mihoyo#hoyo games#fanart#i love my husband#i miss my man#i wanna get back into tears of themis but i dont have enough storage to keep all my games.#playing lads and hsr on the same device isnt for the weak#phainon of aedes elysiae#honkai star rail fanart#tears of themis fanart
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i wish phainon was real so i could make out with him
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i have a vision.
#thinking of drawing this. yeah im gonna do it#honkai star rail#hsr#phainon#phainon fanart#phainon hsr#marius von hagen#tears of themis#phainon of aedes elysiae#honkai star rail fanart#suggestive
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study of alexandre cabanel's fallen angel but make it sephiroth
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more phainon art cuz i havent relic farmed 4 him yet
#CREAMING#phainon#phanon hsr#hsr#honkai star rail#phainon fanart#hoyoverse#fanart#art#i need him so bad#i got him after 131 pulls pls save me.
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tired of all the mean creepy yandere/non-con fics of sunday give me soft loser virgin sunday who’s so down bad for reader he accidentally gets hard seeing their exposed ankles for the first time 🙂↕️
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fanart 4 @luvlyycy 's neighbor!phainon au (linked), specifically the scene where he was dreaming in part 2... hahahahahaa.... (i need him)
#phainon#phainon x reader#honkai star rail x reader#hsr x reader#hsr#honkai star rail#suggestive#phainon smut#fanart#hsr fanart#phainon fanart#dude i love phainon so much the rot is consuming me#FOLLOW LUVLYYCY PLS#made with krita#hes on a leash
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best fic ive read in a while
like real people do.
“There’s something going on,” he says. “A chain of robberies, not random. It’s clean, professional—in and out in under four minutes. I’ve been watching them hit warehouses all across Marmoreal. Whatever they’re after, it’s coordinated. And I can’t keep up on my own.”
ɷ pairing. spider-man!phainon x detective!fem!reader ɷ contains. romance, angst, action, smut (oral sex, fingering), slowburn, spider-man!au, detective!au, mild enemies to lovers!au. profanity, injuries, blood, violence, mentions of drug abuse & human experimentation, etc. ɷ word count. 19.5k

Phainon thinks he’s a pretty good guy.
Okay, maybe not, like, great. He’s not out here winning humanitarian awards or remembering to replace the Brita filter before it turns green. But still. He flosses most nights, and tips well on the rare occasions he orders pizza for dinner. He saves cats from trees, catches robbers in the middle of getaway attempts, and makes a decent grilled cheese when the mood strikes. In the grand cosmic scale of morality, he figures that puts him somewhere between a broke college student and a D-list superhero with a heart of gold.
Which is why, as he’s currently being pursued across rooftops by New Okhema’s most persistent detective, Phainon feels the situation is a little unfair.
“I don’t deserve to be chased like this!” he yells over his shoulder, breaths short, voice muffled through his mask as he narrowly avoids tripping over a pipe. “I’m a pretty good guy!”
The boots pounding behind him don’t slow. “You’re obstructing justice!”
“You’re harassing a concerned citizen!”
He vaults over a low vent and instantly regrets it, the rooftop pitching sideways beneath him as he skids and catches himself just in time to avoid faceplanting into a rusted-out AC unit. Graceful. So graceful. Just like the comics. His heart’s doing the worst kind of cardio in his chest, the kind that feels like guilt and adrenaline and that specific brand of dread that only ever shows up when you’re behind him.
Because if there’s one thing Phainon’s sure of, it’s this: you hate him.
Maybe not, like, hate-hate. Maybe not enough to tase him out of the sky. But enough to chase him across rooftops with the hopes of finally arresting him for good.
He can live with that. He’s been hated before. (He just wishes it didn’t make him kind of want your approval.)
“You’re breaking at least three laws just by standing there!” you shout as he swings up and over the next building.
“That’s slander!” Phainon shouts back. “I counted two!”
You’re getting closer. He can hear it in your voice—less winded than his, more focused. He’s not sure if he’s impressed or terrified. Probably both.
“Do you ever take a break?” you snap as you land behind him with a clean, practiced roll.
Phainon whirls around, arms raised. “Do you ever let anyone live?”
Your eyes narrow like you’re imagining the paperwork it would take to make his disappearance look like an accident.
“Okay, okay! Truce! Five minutes.” He backs up, hands still in the air. “No chasing or tasers. Please.”
You don’t answer, which means you’re at least considering it. He’s getting good at reading your silences, which is probably not a good thing. He should stop doing that. He should stop noticing things about you at all—like how you always pull your sleeves down when you’re thinking, or how you furrow your eyebrows when you’re about to disagree with someone but don’t want to start a fight.
“Look,” he says, tone dropping, just a bit. “This isn’t about me dodging patrol or stealing snacks from that convenience store on 14th Street—”
“You stole—”
“Borrowed,” he corrects quickly. “With intent to pay.”
You stare at him. The wind rustles your coat. Somewhere, a siren wails and dies out.
“There’s something going on,” he says. “A chain of robberies, not random. It’s clean, professional—in and out in under four minutes. I’ve been watching them hit warehouses all across Marmoreal. Whatever they’re after, it’s coordinated. And I can’t keep up on my own.”
He expects you to laugh. Or roll your eyes. Or say something sharp and cutting that’ll make his stomach twist in that way he hates—because you’re usually right.
“I think they’re watching me,” he adds, quieter now. “I think someone knows who I am.”
The wind blows sharp across the rooftop, carrying the tang of rain and smoke and summer dust. It scrapes over the worn brick under Phainon’s boots and rustles your coat, but you don’t move. You just look at him, your face unreadable in the way that always makes his stomach knot a little too tight. It’s the kind of stillness that unnerves him—not because he doesn’t know what you’re thinking, but because he wants to. More than he should. Phainon’s chest rises and falls, just a little too fast.
“That’s a bold claim,” you say slowly.
Yeah. He knows. He also knows you’re not brushing him off, which is scarier than if you had. You’re listening, evaluating. That furrow between your brows is your tell—he’s seen it before, in passing shadows and glimpses from across precinct crime scenes. The way you tilt your head slightly to the left when you’re filing pieces together in real time.
“You have proof?” you ask.
Phainon knows you won’t move without proof—not a whisper, not a theory, not a gut feeling scraped together from caffeine and paranoia. But he doesn’t have clean lines or neat bullet points. What he has is scraps; disconnected threads; a slowly closing hand around the back of his neck every time he turns a corner too sharp. And that feeling—that awful, skin-tight certainty—that something out there has started moving towards him, not away.
“I don’t have anything concrete, but… I’ve been tracking the hits since the first one three weeks ago,” he says, starting to pace now, in small, tight circles, just enough movement to bleed out some of the nervous energy crawling up his spine. “They’re too clean. Like, unrealistically clean. No alarms triggered, no broken doors, no fingerprints. They even bypassed the retinal scanner at one of the biotech labs. Who does that? And for what? They’re not stealing cash or valuables. They’re taking very specific things—equipment, hard drives, chemical canisters.”
“Show me,” you say. Your eyes don’t leave his face. (Well, the mask. But he swears you’re looking through it.)
He blinks. “What?”
You cross your arms. “The footage. The files. Whatever you’ve got. If you’re serious about this, I need to see everything.”
“Oh.” Phainon’s voice pitches up an octave in surprise. “Cool. Okay. Should we, like, grab dinner? I know a good deli down at Kephale Plaza. Best dill pickle sandwiches on this side of Okhema.”

Phainon didn’t lie. Chartonus’ Deli, tucked between a laundromat and a building that’s had a For Sale sign tacked onto the door for fourteen years, does serve the best dill pickle sandwiches in New Okhema City. The fluorescent sign above the deli flickers intermittently—CHART NUS’ on a bad night, HARTONUS DEL when it’s feeling generous—and the inside smells like mustard, old fryer oil, and vinegar.
He’s perched in the booth furthest from the window, under a buzzing ceiling light that flickers every now and then. The vinyl seat squeaks every time he shifts, and the table has a wobble. There’s duct tape across the far corner of the laminate, and someone—possibly Chartonus himself—has carved NO CRYING IN THE DELI into the tabletop.
Phainon has his mask pulled up just past his nose, letting the cool air hit the sweat still clinging to his neck. His hair’s damp, and there’s a tear in the seam of his left glove he only just now noticed. His sandwich is halfway demolished, crumbs gathering on the dark fabric of his suit, pickle juice already soaking into the paper wrapper.
He looks across the table at you. You’re the only person in here not eating, only sipping from a chipped ceramic mug of what Chartonus had claimed was coffee with a shrug. Your coat’s slung over the back of your seat, and your badge is tucked out of sight, but everything about you still screams cop—straight spine, steady eyes, the way your fingers twitch every time the door jingles.
“I told you,” Phainon says around a mouthful of rye and mustard. “Best sandwich in the city.”
“This is where you wanted to debrief?”
He shrugs. “They know my order here.”
You roll your eyes and pull the folder Phainon had handed you on the rooftop from your bag, placing it on the table between you. “You said these started three weeks ago?” you ask, flipping it open.
Phainon nods, brushing crumbs off the table. “Warehouse on Little Thorn. Then a lab two nights later. Then another warehouse. Then the lab again, but a different wing. They’re hitting specific targets, looping back, almost like they’re refining their technique.”
You glance up. “Any pattern to what they’re taking?”
“That’s the thing.” He leans in, placing his half-eaten sandwich on the paper wrapper. “It’s weirdly… modular. Like, they’re not emptying vaults or swiping entire systems. They’re taking parts. Pieces. Very specific ones.”
He slides a finger across one of the printouts. It’s a manifest list from the Little Thorn warehouse, half the lines redacted, but a few still visible.
Carbon-neutral polymer casings
Fiber-optic microarrays
Refrigerated storage containers, Class III
Unknown compound, biohazard sealed
“Doesn’t scream smash-and-grab,” you say, studying the list.
“Exactly. This is purposeful.”
You turn another page. “The cameras—”
“Looped,” Phainon says. “Every time. Not just disabled. The footage looks uninterrupted, except for this weird flicker—like it skips half a second. But the timestamps don’t change.”
You sit back in your seat, fingers drumming on the edge of the table. He watches you think—sees the line between your brows deepen, the way you press your lips together when something doesn’t add up. He likes watching you think. That’s a problem.
“Do you think they’re testing something?” you ask. “Or building it?”
“That’s what I was hoping you’d help me figure out. Detective Brain and Spider Legs. The dream team.”
“Never say that again.”
He gives you a one-shouldered shrug and returns to his sandwich. “Can’t make promises I don’t intend to keep.”
You shake your head and go quiet again, flipping slowly through the rest of the folder. Pages rustle under your hands. The old man behind the counter mutters something unintelligible to the deep fryer. Outsider, a police cruiser drives by without slowing.
When you speak again, your voice is lower. “You said you think someone’s watching you.”
Phainon freezes with a piece of pickle halfway to his mouth. Slowly, he lowers it back to the wrapper. “I don’t think,” he says. “I know.”
You look up.
“Two nights ago, I was tailing one of their runners. Lost him. That should’ve been the end of it, except when I got home…” He hesitates. “My apartment’s locked down. Triple bolted, windows sealed, motion sensors in every hallway. And yet, my closet door was cracked. My spare suit was missing. Nothing else.”
Your expression hardens. “Did you call it in?”
He snorts. “Yeah, sure. Hello, 911, someone stole my crime-fighting spandex, I think I’m being haunted by a bunch of dudes with attitude problems.”
You don’t laugh.
“Sorry,” he mutters. “Deflection. I know.”
“You should’ve told someone sooner,” you say sharply. “If someone has your gear, they might have access to your—”
“They won’t,” he cuts in. “The tech’s locked down. Biometric, failsafes, the works. But it means they were inside. Not watching from across the street. Inside. And that… that’s not normal.”
You nod. “You think it’s connected to the thefts.”
“I think I’ve been getting too close,” he says, quieter now. “And someone wants me out of the way.”
You lean forward, resting your elbows on the table. The cracked TV in the corner flickers, playing a rerun of some late-night court drama with the volume turned down low. A door slams shut somewhere in the back. The deli is empty now except for you two.
“Then we need to get closer,” you say.
Phainon blinks. “Wait—we?”
“This is serious,” you say simply. “And if someone’s watching you, they might come for me next. This is bigger than your usual masked hero antics, Spider-Man. So, yeah. We.”
He’s staring again. He knows he is. He should probably say something witty or obnoxious, but his throat’s dry and his heart’s doing that thing again. “Cool,” he says finally, and it comes out a little too quiet. “Cool cool cool cool cool.”
You push the folder back towards him, then stand and grab your coat off the back of the chair. “Tomorrow night,” you say. “Bring everything else you’ve got. We set up a timeline, match it to police records. I want this mapped out by morning.”
He gives a mock salute. “Aye aye, Captain.”
You pause at the door, just long enough to glance over your shoulder. “Wash your suit,” you say. “You smell like mustard.”
The bell jingles as the door swings shut behind you. Phainon stays in the booth for a while, finishing his sandwich in silence. The TV buzzes in the corner. The ceiling light blinks once, then steadies.

The alley off Cortland Street feels shadier than it is in the almost-darkness. Every step Phainon takes echoes just a little too sharply off the damp brick walls, the soles of his boots scraping against cracked pavement slick from the afternoon rain. The air is thick with the tang of gasoline, rotting leaves, and whatever chemical sludge is leaking from the storm drain at the corner. It’s the kind of place you walk faster through on instinct, even if you’ve got super reflexes and unnatural strength.
But for once, he’s early.
The wall behind him is papered with maps: big ones, small ones, some he stole from news kiosks and the city library, others he scrawled himself in the middle of the night, half-asleep and hunched over his kitchen counter with a sharpie in his mouth. He’s patched them together like a spiderweb, the red and black marker lines bleeding over each other, looping through neighbourhoods and dead ends. It’s messy, barely legible in some places, but it serves its purpose.
He shifts on the overturned milk crate he’s using as a seat and pulls his mask halfway up to breathe properly. The flickering streetlight above him hums like a dying bee. There’s a smear of mustard on his glove from the sandwich last night. He tries not to think about how long it’s been since he’s properly showered.
He hates waiting. But he’d never admit that he’s anxious. Especially not for you.
Your footsteps break the quiet—sharp, sure, even. The same way they always sound when you’re walking up behind him like you’re about to read him his Miranda rights.
He doesn’t turn around immediately. That would be too obvious. Too eager. “I was starting to think you ditched,” he says instead, flipping a page in the notebook balanced on his knee.
“You said nine,” you answer. “It’s eight fifty-nine.”
He smiles, just a little. Can’t help it. “Wow. A punctual cop.”
You walk past him, wordless, and he catches the faint scent of your shampoo—clean, sharp, maybe citrus? (He needs to stop.)
You step up to the wall of maps, arms crossed. The light glints off the corner of your badge, half-tucked beneath your jacket. You tilt your head to the side, the same way you always do when you’re processing too many things at once. God, he’s noticed that too many times.
“This is a mess,” you say flatly.
“Organised chaos,” he corrects.
You shoot him a look, then kneel to examine the clustered marks around Marmoreal’s industrial sector. Your fingers trace a wide red loop that sounds four separate Xs.
Phainon hops down from his crate and joins you, dropping into a crouch beside you. “Those are the first confirmed break-ins. They form a pretty clear arc if you connect the dots. Started on the western edge. They’re moving clockwise.”
“So whatever they’re after is in the centre,” you muse.
“Bingo,” he says, tapping the innermost circle. “And guess what’s smack-dab in the middle of the whole thing?”
He holds up a photo of a nondescript warehouse, overgrown with weeds, one wall tagged in massive purple spray paint that says I HATE BEES. It’s ugly. You frown and say, “That place?”
Phainon nods. “Used to be a government R&D site during the old tech boom, but it was supposedly shut down after an acid leak took out the foundation. Now it’s just a lot with a locked fence and shit ton of asbestos.”
“Why hasn’t anyone investigated it?”
“Because it’s boring,” he says. “There’s no power running to it. No reported disturbances. No reason for patrol to bother. But if you dig deeper—like, old permit records and city zoning logs—there’s a basement that’s sealed off. No blueprint access since 2013.”
Your silence stretches. Phainon watches the gears turning in your head and realises—again, and with an unfortunate amount of clarity—that he likes watching you think. He really, really shouldn’t.
“So they’re not just building something,” you say. “They’re hiding it.”
“Or staging it.”
“We’ll split up,” you say. “Tonight. You take the chemical plant on Fifth. I’ll hit the battery storage facility near the docks. If either of them gets hit, we regroup.”
“Copy that,” he says lightly, brushing the dust off his gloved palms as he stands beside you. “Though I think you just want to get rid of me.”
“I want to get results,” you correct, already scanning the nearest cluster of notes on the map again. “And we’ll cover more ground this way.”
Fair, rational, efficient. So typically you. Phainon swallows down the inexplicable disappointment in his throat and tries to focus. “The chemical plant’s been shut down since the fires in March, but I’ve seen movement there—shadows mostly, heat signatures. And one of the power boxes was tampered with last week. Could just be squatters, but…”
“But this group doesn’t leave power boxes half-cut,” you finish, glancing at him. “They don’t miss steps.”
Exactly. He doesn’t say it out loud, but the tension in his shoulders eases a little. You’re starting to see what he sees.
You turn back to the wall, fingers brushing one of the maps again, slower this time. Your brows are furrowed, the crease between them deeper than usual. “I’ll have to log this in quietly. My team’s not going to love me going off-grid again.”
“Your team doesn’t know you’re chasing me around rooftops?”
“They know. They just don’t know why,” you say. “Which is probably for the best.”
He huffs out a half-laugh, kicking lightly at the cracked asphalt near your foot. “Flattered.”
“You shouldn’t be.”
“Still. Thanks for not turning me in.”
You shrug. “You haven’t made it worth my while yet.”
He wants to tease you for that. Wants to say something dumb and stupid about buying you a terrible coffee from a 24-hour diner or bribing you with Chartonus’ sandwiches, but instead, he asks, “You have a burner?”
You nod. Phainon reaches into one of the hidden pouches sewn inside his suit—past the web cartridges, the crumpled snack wrapper, the broken-off pen cap he meant to throw away yesterday—and pulls out his own cracked phone. The screen’s a mess of spiderwebbed lines, the plastic casing half melted at the edges from some accident involving an exploding rooftop generator last week.
You raise your brows. “That’s a phone?”
“Technically,” he says, unlocking it with a swipe and opening a new contact. “Give me your number. I’ll send coordinates if I catch anything tonight.”
You rattle off a sequence of numbers, and add, “Burner ends in zero-nine. Don’t call me unless it’s urgent.”
“Define urgent.”
“Explosion. Gunfire. Alien invasion.”
“So… brunch?”

Phainon’s lucky day starts with a pigeon dive-bombing his head, continues with a missed web shot that sends him careening into a fire escape, and somehow still manages to improve—because you said yes to brunch with him.
Or, well, with Spider-Man, which is still him, but in that weird, glass-wall kind of way. You don’t know what he looks like beneath the mask, don’t know his name, his address, his real voice, or the fact that he thought he was going to be late because he tried to hand-sew a rip in his suit and pricked his thumb seventeen times.
He tries not to make a big deal out of it. He really does. But the truth is, it’s been 36 hours since the last robbery attempt, he hasn’t been chased across a rooftop in at least two days, and now you’re sitting across from him at a sunlit table in a tucked-away café where the chairs don’t match and the menus are handwritten in cursive chalk. (And you ordered pancakes. That alone feels like a sign from the universe.)
Phainon takes a sip of his burnt espresso, after pulling his mask up to let it rest on the bridge of his nose. He leans back in his chair, letting the sounds of the café fill the silence—coffee machines hissing, silverware clinking, someone arguing gently in French at the counter. It’s the kind of place that feels too warm for a conversation about conspiracy rings and illegal tech trade, which is probably why he chose it. Something about soft pancakes makes even the worst theories easier to digest.
You flip through a manila folder with highlighter streaks and dog-eared corners, diagrams of circuits, and what look like stolen security camera stills, all stacked and filed with precision. He’s seen you interrogate a guy in less than five words before. Watching you cut a pancake with that same level of intensity is kind of terrifying.
Also: kind of hot. But that’s not relevant.
“So,” he says, because the silence is beginning to grate at him, “have I won you over with my sparkling personality yet, or are you still planning to arrest me after this?”
You hum and reach for the syrup. “I can’t decide if you’re more irritating in daylight or when you’re dangling upside down on a fire escape at 2 a.m.”
Phainon takes a sip of espresso, squinting through the bitter taste. “Why not both?”
You glare at him.
“I’m trying to be helpful,” he says, quieter now. He leans in a little, lowering his voice in case someone’s listening. “I know I’m not the most traditional source, and I’m aware I’m breaking, like, a thousand chain-of-command rules just by talking to you, but I’ve been watching these people for weeks. And I’ve never seen anything like this. They’re too clean. Too prepared.”
You nod. He can tell you’ve already connected the dots. You’ve probably connected ten more he hasn’t even noticed yet. Your eyes are sharp, alert, focused in that laser-sight kind of way that makes his skin itch under the mask.
“I went by the Marmoreal site last night,” you say. “Didn’t go in, though—just circled. But there was movement in the back. A truck with no license plate.”
“Same model from the Fourth Street hit?”
“Couldn’t see,” you admit. “But the sound was the same. The engine was too quiet to be local, so it was clearly modified.”
Phainon exhales slowly. “So they’re still active.”
“Very.” You stab at a piece of pancake and glance up at him. “You sleep at all?”
“...No,” he mutters, sheepish. “But I took a power name at a bus stop for twenty-seven minutes and dreamed I was being eaten by a vending machine, so that counts.”
“Healthy,” you deadpan.
He shrugs. “You’re one to talk. When was the last time you took a break that wasn’t… this?”
“I’m not the one with a possible concussion and jam on my mask.”
“I like jam,” Phainon says.
You shake your head, but he catches the faintest hint of amusement in your face, quickly hidden behind your coffee cup. He doesn’t say anything; just watches as you lean back in your chair, face finally relaxing into something that looks a little less like a detective building a case and a little more like a person enjoying a few minutes of peace.
That’s when it hits him: this is the first time he’s seen you still. Not mid-chase, not interrogating, not tearing through evidence. Just you, and pancakes, and a soft patch of sunlight warming your sleeve.
He’s in so much trouble.
You glance at him, then, like you can feel it. “What?”
“Nothing,” he says quickly, fiddling with a sugar packet. “Just thinking.”
You narrow your eyes. “Dangerous.”
“Extremely.”
“Why’d you bring me here?”
He looks up. “What?”
“This café. It’s nice. Quiet. You could’ve picked anywhere.”
Phainon hesitates. He wants to say it’s because it’s his favourite. Because the coffee’s bad but the people are nice. Because the chairs don’t match and the chalkboard menus always misspell something. Because it feels safe. Because maybe, somewhere in the back of his idiotic brain, he wanted you to like it.
Instead, he shrugs and says, “Thought you’d appreciate the pancakes.”You study him for a second longer. Then, finally, finally, you smile. “Don’t make a habit of being right, Spider-Man,” you say, spearing another bite.

It turns out that Phainon’s theory is, horrifically, right.
One week. That’s all it takes.
Seven days of split patrols and encrypted texts, of cataloguing movement and double-checking routes, of scribbling half-mad notes in the margins of maps and losing sleep trying to figure out what the connection is. He’d hoped, stupidly, that the quiet meant progress. That maybe, maybe they’d spooked whoever was behind it. That maybe the worst thing waiting for him that week would be another broken web-shooter or a pigeon with a vendetta.
[22:41] Detective Brain: Battery storage facility. Crossfire. I’m okay.
You’re okay. That should be enough. It should settle the spike of cold panic in his chest, should anchor him where he stands, balancing on the lip of a lamppost on 39th Street. But he rereads it again. Then again.
His fingers tighten around the edge of the lamp. The city breathes below him, neon-drenched and unaware. Somewhere in the distance, a police siren howls. Closer, a car door slams and someone yells about a parking ticket.
Phainon jumps.
The wind is sharp against his skin as he swings, the air slapping his cheeks even through his mask. He’s faster than usual—more desperate than smooth. It’s a graceless sprint across rooftops, the kind that leaves him barely clearing ledges, boots skimming waterlogged gutters, lungs burning. He doesn’t know if you’re hurt. You said you’re okay, but “okay” is such a vague, terrible word when it comes from someone who faces dangerous situations for a living.
The warehouse by the docks comes into view fast, hulking and silent beneath the sodium lights. There’s a scorch mark across the landing bay door, the acrid scent of melted insulation still curling up into the air. Two squad cars are parked askew outside the chain link fence, but the cops are gone, or inside, or too distracted to notice the figure scrambling onto the roof with shaking hands.
Phainon crouches low and peers through the skylight.
You’re inside, standing near a bank of empty battery casings and shattered glass, a radio pressed to your shoulder. You’re not limping. No visible blood. His heart slows half a beat. He taps lightly on the glass. You look up fast, instinctive, already half-reaching for your weapon before you register him. Your eyes narrow, but only briefly. Then you jerk your chin towards the fire escape.
He meets you on the second floor, slipping in through a side window. You’re alone in the room, save for the mess of forensic markers, scorch marks, and the bitter ozone of post-explosion cleanup.
“I’m fine,” you say, even before he can speak.
“You’re not fine,” he snaps, more sharply than he means to. “You said crossfire. That’s not, like, a stubbed toe.”
“It wasn’t aimed at me.”
“That doesn’t help!”
He hears his own voice—too loud, too worried, echoing off concrete—and he turns away before you can see the guilt settling between his shoulders. He runs a hand over his head, dragging his glove against his scalp like he could rub the fear out through friction alone.
You step closer. Your boots crunch over a piece of broken casing. “Spider-Man—”
“What happened?” he cuts in. He needs to focus, needs to understand it before he spirals into full-blown panic. “Walk me through it.”
You sigh, but nod. “I was watching the south entrance. Nothing for over two hours. Then, just past ten, the sensors I set up on the west wall tripped. I saw three figures, all masked. One of them had a disruptor—fried the cameras before we could catch a clear face.”
“Lithium?”
“Gone,” you confirm. “They knew exactly where to go. They broke open the storage lock, took one unit, and left the others untouched.”
“Only one?”
“One. And Spider-Man—” your eyes meet his again, steady now, serious—“they weren’t just fast. They know how to fight. They looked trained for this kind of shit.”
He exhales through gritted teeth. “You think they’re building something.”
“I think they already have,” you say grimly. “And they’re just waiting for the right battery to turn it on.”
Phainon shifts his weight and finally asks the question that’s been sticking in his throat like a splinter. “Did they see you?”
“I—I don’t know. Maybe,” you say.
“Maybe?” His voice rises again.
“I lost one in the dark. I think they doubled back. I’m not sure.”
Phainon wants to scream. Or punch something. Or grab you and teleport you somewhere far away where no one has disruptors and no one bleeds on cold warehouse floors. But he can’t do any of that. He can only stand there, vibrating with a kind of fear he doesn’t have the vocabulary for.
“I should have been there,” he mutters.
“You were across the city.”
“That’s not an excuse.”
You step into his space, close enough that he can hear your breath. “Spider-Man. Stop. I’m not dead.”
“Yet,” he says.
“I’ve been trained for this,” you say. “I know how to handle myself.”
He doesn’t doubt that. Not even for a second. But he also knows what it feels like to arrive too late, to find a scene that’s already stained with the blood of his loved ones. He drags a hand down his face. “You need backup.”
“I’ve got it,” you say, your voice firm. “I’ve got you.”
It’s not meant to do what it does, but those words dig into him deeper than any bullet could. He stares at you for a beat too long, every possible response crashing into each other like waves in his skull.
Finally, he says, quietly, “Yeah. You do. Can I take you home?”
Phainon expects you to disagree. Instead, you let your shoulders slump with relief, and say, “Yes, please.”
The wind cuts sharp along the docks when he leads you out, the air heavy with the smell of brine, old smoke, and burnt copper. There’s a metallic haze still lingering over the scene, but you don’t flinch from it. You walk steadily beside him, chin up, even if your hand hovers just a little closer to your holster than usual. He doesn’t miss that.
The streets are quieter now. Most of the cops have cleared out. A few plainclothes agents hang back to assess the scene, but they barely glance up when he web-slings both of you onto the nearest rooftop—low enough to keep out of view, high enough to get some space from the mess below. You don’t complain. You never do. Even now, when your knees must ache from crouching in dark corners, when your head probably pounds from the tension of nearly being caught in open fire, you simply follow him, like it’s normal. Like you trust him.
Phainon keeps his hold light but steady around your waist, one hand braced just beneath your elbow. You’re warmer than he expects, heat leaking through your jacket into his gloves. Every time he moves—shoots a string of webs, pulls you forward, steadies your landing—he feels you adjust to match him. Fluid. Familiar. (He shouldn’t like that as much as he does.)
Your building’s only three blocks away, and you whisper the directions into his ear. Phainon doesn’t want to rush it. He doesn’t want to leave you alone, not yet—not while your jaw is still set a little too tight and the adrenaline hasn’t fully drained from your bones.
When he finally lands on your fire escape, he lets go reluctantly.
You ease away from him, brushing your hair back, your expression unreadable as always. “You don’t have to walk me all the way up.”
“I know,” he says, already crouched on the rail. “I just… wanted to be sure.”
“Thanks.”
He nods and tries to act casual. Tries not to stare too hard at the soft light spilling out of your apartment window, or the way your fingers fidget at your sides like you’re still half in the fight. He wants to ask if you’re okay again, wants to tell you that the word “crossfire” nearly gave him a heart attack. But you’re already halfway to the window, unlocking it and ducking through the frame.
“Spider-Man?” you say, just before you disappear inside.
“Yeah?”
“Do you, uh, want to come inside?”
He blinks. Of all the possibilities that had been ricocheting around in his head—“stay safe,” or “thanks for the ride,” or “you’re worrying too much”—this had not made the cut. Not even close.
It stalls him, mid-perch, one gloved hand gripping the rusted iron railing of the fire escape, the other resting loosely on his knee. The mask hides his face, but he’s pretty sure his surprise is obvious anyway, just in the way his breath catches or how still he suddenly goes.
Your silhouette is soft in the glow of your apartment’s light. You’ve already kicked off your boots inside the window, standing barefoot on the wooden floorboards, one hand holding the window open, the other resting lightly on the frame.
“I mean,” you say after a second, brows furrowed. “Only if you want to. You don’t have to or anything. You probably have rooftops to gallivant across and—”
“I want to,” he says quickly, too quickly. Then he clears his throat and tries again. “I mean—yeah. If you’re okay with it.”
Your mouth curves, not quite into a smile, but something close enough to make something twist behind his ribs. “You literally carried me three blocks through the air. I think we’re past the point of stranger danger.”
He huffs out a short laugh and swings one leg over the windowsill. It takes a bit of maneuvering to avoid smacking his knees against your desk, and he’s painfully aware of every scuff his boots leave behind on your floor. The space smells like laundry detergent and something warm—coffee grounds, maybe. Or cinnamon. The kind of smell that makes his shoulders start to relax before he even realises it.
Your apartment is small but lived-in. A stack of case files teeters on the kitchen table next to a mug. Your precinct jacket hangs over the back of the couch. There are photos pinned to the side of the fridge with mismatched magnets: city skylines, a blurry shot of you at what looks like a precinct holiday party, someone in a ridiculous Halloween costume posing like a superhero. Phainon feels something tug deep and stupid in his chest.
“Make yourself at home,” you say, heading into the kitchen and flipping on the kettle without needing to ask. “I’ve got tea or instant coffee. No milk, though. Sorry.”
He stays standing for a second longer, then slowly pulls off his gloves and tucks them into his belt. His mask stays on. He lifts the bottom edge just past his mouth, enough to breathe easier, but not enough to risk—well, anything else.
“Tea’s good,” he says.
You nod, moving with a kind of efficiency that reminds him again that you’re still running on fumes. There’s a scrape as you grab two mugs, the clink of metal as you stir one without sugar. You hand him the other without ceremony.
He takes it carefully, fingers brushing yours. “Thanks.”
“No problem,” you return, then gesture to the couch. “We can sit. If you’re staying a few minutes.”
He is. He knows he is. He follows you to the couch and lowers himself into the corner, stiff at first, like his body hasn’t caught up to the fact that he’s safe here. With you. There’s a blanket balled up on one side and an old remote wedged between the cushions. You move them without thinking and curl one leg beneath you, facing him.
“So,” you say. “Do you want to talk about it?”
Phainon frowns. “The break-in?”
“No,” you say, looking at him squarely. “You. You were… panicked tonight.”
Phainon goes still. It’s not immediate—not sharp like a flinch, but a quiet kind of freezing, like someone’s gently pulling the emergency brake in his chest. He doesn’t look away from you, but he doesn’t answer either. His tea cools between his fingers.
You shift forward a little, your voice low. “Look, I’m not asking because I’m nosy. Or because I want some dramatic unmasking moment sort of thing. I just…” You pause, exhale. “I got lucky tonight. That’s what it was. Luck. If I hadn’t ducked at the right second, if they’d come around the corner just a little faster—”
“But they didn’t,” he says quietly, cutting you off.
“That’s not the point.”
You’re sharper now, sitting straighter, your knee pressed to the cushion. Your eyes flash—not with anger, but fear, the kind you don’t let people see if you can help it. But he sees it. And worse, he knows it. He recognises it in the widening of your eyes, the way your fingers curl against your palm.
You swallow. “I’m scared, Spider-Man. I know you’re helping. I trust you. But this—this thing we’re chasing… if something happens to you—I won’t even know your name. I won’t know who to look for. Or if I should look at all. That’s not just reckless, that’s—cruel.”
He flinches at that. You notice.
“I just want to know who’s standing next to me,” you say. “That’s not so much to ask.”
“I can’t,” he says, before he’s even fully processed it. “I’m sorry.”
“That’s not good enough.” Your voice isn’t raised, but there’s a new edge to it now, sharper than anger. Hurt, maybe. Disappointment. It slices straight through his armour. “You trust me with your life out there. Every night. You trust me not to shoot you in the back, or get in your way, or blow your cover. But you don’t trust me enough to know who you are?”
“It’s not about trust,” he says quickly, too defensively. “It’s—God, you think I don’t want to tell you? You think I don’t—don’t lie awake wondering what would happen if I did? I think about it all the time.”
“Then what’s stopping you?”
He looks at you, then. You’re not angry. You’re scared. Scared of whatever’s coming next. Scared of losing control, of losing him.
“You don’t understand what that means,” he says. “If you know who I am—really know—it changes everything. You don’t get to walk away from that. You don’t get to un-know it if something happens. If someone finds out—”
“I’m a cop, Spider-Man. I’ve seen worse things than secret identities.”
“It’s not just mine,” he says. “It’s everyone around me. You knowing—you become a target.”
“I’m already a target.”
“Not like this,” he bites out. “If someone traces it back to you—if they think you matter to me—”
“I do matter to you.”
You suck in a breath like you didn’t mean to say it that way. But you don’t take it back. You sit there, across from him, eyes steady and hurting and unshakably honest. And all Phainon can think is: Shit.
“You do,” he says, barely audible. “Of course you do.”
“Then why won’t you tell me?”
He closes his eyes, and rubs a hand over the edge of his mask like he can somehow erase the pressure building behind his skull. “Because the second I do,” he says, “you stop being just a cop with good instincts and better aim. You become mine. And that makes you vulnerable in a way I don’t know how to protect you from.”
You shake your head, frustrated. “You don’t get to make that decision for me. I’m not asking for your social security number, or something. I’m asking to know who’s at my side when the bullets fly. When the lights go out. When it’s 2 a.m. and I can’t sleep because I think I saw someone watching my window. I need more than a voice behind a mask. I deserve more.”
He doesn’t argue. He doesn’t tell you you’re wrong, because you’re not. But still, he stays silent.
You stare at him for a moment longer, and when it’s clear he won’t budge, you get up. The mug of tea still has steam spiralling out of it as you walk to the sink and set it down, the sound softer than your next words: “I think you should go.”
Phainon doesn’t try to stop you, or ask you to reconsider. He simply nods, and stands. There’s a strange heaviness in his limbs as he pulls the mask down over his face, tugs his gloves on with fingers that feel numb. He moves to the window but pauses with one foot already on the sill.
“I do trust you,” he says. “More than anyone.”

It’s not that you’re avoiding each other.
It’s that you’re both avoiding each other—which, in practice, amounts to the same thing.
Patrols become asynchronous: silent intel dumps in the encrypted folder, maps updated with colour-coded marks that speak more than either of you will via text. There are no more late-night debriefs on rooftops, no post-mission walks home, no casual banter about who has the worst taste in energy bars. When you text, it’s clipped, tactical. When he replies, it’s mechanical.
(‘West dock checkpoint cleared. No sign of activity.’
‘Copy. South alley tripwire still intact.’)
Phainon doesn’t know what hurts more: the silence, or the fact that it’s entirely his fault. Maybe he was right. Maybe the secret is safer kept. Maybe you are less of a target this way.
But God, it’s lonely.
There’s a rhythm to the city that used to make sense—pulse and swing, fire escapes and antenna towers, the rough percussion of tires against potholes. But now it all feels flat. The rooftops are colder. His landing sticks a little less clean. Even the pigeons don’t heckle him like they used to.
It’s been two weeks. Two long, aching weeks, until, at 3:37 a.m., Phainon receives a text from you, and it takes him less than a minute to reply.
He doesn’t stop to think, or worry if this is a trap, or a joke, or worse—if you’re still mad at him. When he lands outside your apartment, the window’s already cracked open. Inside, the lights are on low, and there’s a corkboard spread across your living room wall now, half-covered in photos, schematics, lines of red string and sticky notes scrawled in tight, impatient handwriting he recognises from your field memos.
You don’t greet him. You just hand him a folder, your eyes dark with something between fear and exhaustion.
“Biotech division out of Theoros Labs,” you say. “It used to be focused on adaptive immunotherapy, but they lost funding three years ago and went dark. The shell company they reopened under is tied to a private security contractor out of Styxia. And guess what their latest research files are tagged under?”
Phainon’s already flipping through the pages. His gloved fingers still. His stomach drops.
ARACHNID-BASED ENHANCEMENT TRIALS – SUBJECT 33550336. MODEL NAME: FLAME REAVER.
He looks up. “They’re trying to replicate me.”
“Not just replicate,” you say, shaking your head. “Weaponise.”
Your voice is thin, dry, like it costs you something to even say it aloud.
“They’ve been pulling data from old surveillance—fight footage, patrol patterns, even the way you move. You know how we assumed they were looking for high-density batteries to power a device?” You tap one of the diagrams on the corkboard, the spine of it shaped like a human thorax with branching nodes along the shoulders. “Turns out it’s a synthetic neuromuscular system. And this—this lithium core—it’s the ignition switch.”
Phainon stares at the blueprint. It’s rough, unfinished, but horrifyingly clear: a bipedal unit, modelled after him. Spinal cord wiring where his web shooters would be. Photoreactive visor instead of eyes. Muscle clusters designed for explosive vertical leap. Neural sync modules buried in the wrists and calves.
A Spider-Man, stripped of the man.
“Why?” he says, voice hoarse. “Why build this?”
“I don’t know yet,” you admit. “But someone out there sees you as more than just a vigilante nuisance. They see you as a prototype. A formula. Something to replicate, mass-produce, and control.”
He sinks onto the edge of your couch, folder open in his lap. The diagram stares back at him, accusatory and unforgiving. It’s him. The curve of the stance, the wide-set shoulders, the way the unit’s balance favours its left side, just like he does when his knee’s aching. They didn’t just study him; they dissected him.
“How long have you known?” he asks quietly.
“A few days,” you say. “I wanted to be sure. Didn’t want to come to you with a hunch and nothing to back it up.”
“And you texted me anyway.”
You meet his gaze across the room. “Because it’s you, Spider-Man. Look, I know you think hiding your identity keeps people safe. But this? This proves it doesn’t. They’re coming for you whether or not I know your face. They already have your gait, your voice, your power levels. They’re not trying to figure out who you are anymore. They don’t care. They just want to turn you into something they can sell.”
He sets the folder down. His hands won’t stop shaking. “How… did you find out about all this?”
“Don’t get mad.”
When Phainon doesn’t say anything, you sigh and look away.
“I visited the old R&D site. Alone.”
“Are you serious?” Phainon gestures so wildly that his web cartridge knocks against the back of your chair. He stands abruptly. The folder falls from his lap, papers scattering across your rug. “You went alone. To Theoros. To Styxia-backed labs that specialise in high-risk bioweapons. Without calling me.”
“I called you when I had proof—”
“You shouldn’t have gone in the first place!” he explodes. “What the hell were you thinking? Do you want to get dissected? Shot? Replaced with one of those—those things—”
“You weren’t talking to me!” you shout back. “What was I supposed to do? Wait until they raided another warehouse?”
“I was trying to protect you,” Phainon grits out. “And instead you threw yourself into a place that could’ve had armed personnel, pressure sensors, live prototypes—anything.”
You throw your arms out. “And what was the alternative? Sit on my hands while they build a weaponised version of you? Wait until there’s a second Spider-Man crawling up government buildings with a built-in kill switch? I don’t know how to sit still, Spider-Man. Not when I’m this scared.”
“You think I’m not scared? You think I haven’t been replaying every second of that night at the docks? That I haven’t imagined a dozen versions of how it could’ve gone wrong? You think I’m not scared every time I don’t hear from you for a few hours?”
“Then why didn’t you say any of that? Why did you shut me out?”
“Because if I said it out loud,” Phainon spits, pacing again, hands flying to his head, “then it would be real. It would be—you would be real. Not just someone chasing me on my patrol route. Not just someone who’s helping me out. You’d be a person I’d have to lose.”
You blink, thrown. “You think you’re going to lose me?”
“I know I could,” he says, almost like it hurts. “Because it’s already happened. Every time I get close—every single time—it ends the same way. Either they die, or I leave first. Because that’s the only choice I ever get.”
He doesn’t even hear how loud his voice has gotten, doesn’t notice how he’s gesturing wildly, storming back and forth across your living room.
“I can’t protect you from this. I can’t protect you from them. I can’t even protect myself. You want me to give you a name, but that’s the one thing I can’t do. Because once you have that, it’s over. You’ll look at me differently. Or worse—you’ll stop looking at me. And I can’t—God, I can’t stand that.
“Do you know what it’s like to see yourself turned into a blueprint? To see a file full of numbers and heat signatures and recorded footage and realise someone out there has broken you down into a fucking algorithm? That they don’t see a person—they see a weapon?
“I didn’t sign up for this shit! I didn’t even sign up to be Spider-Man. I just… was. And now they’ve taken that and turned it into something else. Something that walks like me and fights like me and could kill you without thinking. And the worst part is that if you’d died at that lab, I—no one would’ve even known. You’d just be another casualty they scrub from the records—and that would’ve been my fault.”
His voice has dropped to a whisper. His hands are trembling.
He doesn’t realise until you do—until your eyes go wide, and your breath catches like you’ve been sucker-punched.
His mask is gone, not pushed halfway up, or nudged for a sip of tea. Gone. Somewhere in the middle of that breakdown—while he was talking too fast and breathing too hard and tearing at his suit like it was suffocating him—he took it off.
His hair’s a mess, flattened by the fabric, and his face is flushed, mouth parted slightly as he sucks in breath after breath. There’s a bruise blooming along his cheekbone, and a cut healing just beneath his chin. He looks young, with silvery-white hair and bright blue eyes that are rimmed with the redness that comes with exhaustion and caffeine.
“...Oh,” Phainon says, stunned. “Shit.”
You blink, slowly, as though grounding yourself in reality again. “You took your mask off.”
He starts to lift a hand to cover his face, instinct kicking in too late. Gently, more carefully than anything else that’s passed between you tonight, you reach up and take the mask from his hand. Your fingers brush his knuckles, and he flinches, but he doesn’t pull away.
Phainon drops his hand and lets out a shallow breath. “I… didn’t mean to.”
“You didn’t mean to,” you echo. “Jesus.”
Phainon can’t say anything, so he simply stands there, feeling as naked as the day he first stepped onto a rooftop and dared to believe he could protect anyone. His heart pounds loud in his ears. He can feel it in his throat, his fingertips, his teeth.
“Can I— Will you tell me your name?” you whisper.
He wets his lips, and says, quietly, “Phainon.”
You nod, once, and say it back. “Phainon,” you repeat, like it’s a truth you’ll guard with your life. “Okay. I’m not afraid of you. And I’m not leaving. So either you let me help, because you asked me to, or I break into another lab and do it anyway. Your call.”
Phainon stares at you: you, with your voice barely holding steady; you, standing in your living room full of maps and stolen schematics and caffeine-fueled desperation; you, tired and stubborn and loyal enough to make him fall to his knees.
“Okay,” he says quietly.
You reach out, then, and Phainon thinks you’re handing his mask back to him, but instead, you wrap your arms tightly around his torso and pull him into you.
He doesn’t move at first. You’re pressed to him, arms wrapped tight around his torso like you mean to hold the pieces of him together before they scatter to the wind. Your cheek rests just above his heart, right where it beats too loud and too fast, thudding like it’s trying to break free from his ribs. His hands hover uselessly in the air for a second, fingers twitching, stunned by the contact, by the way you came to him so easily, so willingly, after all of it.
He exhales. The air leaves his lungs like it’s been caged there for years. His shoulders drop an inch. His spine slackens just enough for him to bend down.
He lifts his arms slowly, like he’s learning how to move again. His fingers brush your back, light and unsure, but you don’t flinch. You don’t pull away. So he lets his palms flatten, one at the curve of your spine, the other curling loosely over your shoulder.
He breathes in.
God, it’s you. Soap and smoke and citrus shampoo. A hundred times he’s seen you crouched beside him on rooftops or hunched over a laptop, bathed in the blue glow of surveillance feeds. But this is different. This is you, pressed to him like you belong there, like the world outside can wait.
His grip tightens, no longer tentative—arms looping fully around you now, hands grasping like he needs to keep you tethered, like if he lets go, you’ll disappear back into a nightmare or a lab or a headline with your name misspelled. His chin tips forward until his face rests in the hollow of your neck, and it’s instinct, not thought that guides him there. His breath stirs the hair at your temple. He swallows hard.
(It’s you. It’s you, and you’re warm and safe and alive in his arms.)
Phainon closes his eyes and pretends like everything else in the living room doesn’t exist—the weaponised duplicate in the file folder, the surveillance footage broken down to frames per second, the machine built in his image but stripped of everything human. He forgets about the mask you dropped, crumpled on the floor, and the voice in his head screaming that he’s made a mistake, that you’ll leave once the shock fades, that nothing good can come of this.
Instead, he listens to your heartbeat. He memorises the slope of your shoulders beneath his palms, the soft way your hand has fisted in the fabric of his suit like you’re afraid he might vanish, too.
It comes to him—terrible and quiet and so obvious it aches.
He could be in love with you.
Not the kind of love he can shove into the seams of his second life. Not the safe, arm’s-length affection that lives behind jokes and shared intel and the occasional brush of fingers across a coffee cup. No, this is the dangerous kind. The kind that makes you stupid. The kind that makes you soft. (The kind that makes you want.)
He wants a future he doesn’t dare picture. He wants to walk down the street with you in broad daylight. He wants to take off the suit and be Phainon, just Phainon, and know you’ll still look at him the same way.
(His hands tremble. You hold him tighter.)
It’s that simple. You don’t push. You don’t speak. You just breathe against his chest, steady and unwavering and constant, like you always are. Phainon presses his mouth to your hair. His eyes sting, but he doesn’t cry.

It’s five in the morning, and Phainon is walking down a cracked sidewalk beside you with his suit half-zipped, his mask stuffed into your hoodie pocket, and a buzzing under his skin that he’s trying really hard to ignore. You’re beside him, arms crossed against the early chill, leading the way like this—walking, together—is something you do all the time.
It’s not a date, he tells himself. It’s really not.
But you mentioned waffles. And your voice had been tired but warm when you said it. And he hadn’t wanted to leave yet.
So here he is. Not skipping, because he’s got some dignity, but definitely walking with a little too much bounce for someone who found out he’s being reverse-engineered into a murder bot a little over an hour ago.
The city’s quieter than it ever gets during daylight, the kind of hush that only exists in the space between the last bar closing and the first train running. A low mist clings to the ground, curling around traffic lights and benches and empty newsstands. It’s eerie, maybe, but not unfriendly. Like the city’s holding its breath right along with him.
Phainon doesn’t know what he’s supposed to be feeling. Dread, maybe. Paranoia. Existential terror. But instead, all he feels is this weightless hum in his chest, the kind that makes you walk a little taller, swing your arms a little looser. The kind that makes you forget you’re still half in your gear and probably look completely insane.
You glance over at him as you cross the street, the corner of your mouth twitching like you’re trying not to smile. “You’re doing that thing again.”
“What thing?”
“Staring at me.”
Phainon stumbles on a crack in the sidewalk. “I’m not,” he says, too quickly.
“You are,” you say, not unkindly. “Like I’m going to vanish or something.”
Phainon rubs the back of his neck, grateful for the relative darkness. “Well. I mean. You did break into a lab by yourself, so I wouldn’t put it past you.”
“Okay, fair,” you concede, nudging him lightly with your elbow. “Still. You’ve got that face on. The one that makes me feel like I’ve got, like, a mysterious smear of radioactive ink on my forehead.”
“I don’t have a face.”
“You do have a face,” you say. “That’s the problem now, remember?”
Phainon huffs out a laugh and looks away, suddenly all too aware of the morning air on his skin, of the fact that he’s not wearing his mask, of how easy it is to joke with you. He’s not sure what scares him more: being turned into a weapon, or feeling like this.
You walk in comfortable silence for a block or two, hands tucked into your sleeves, your breath fogging slightly in the chill. The sky is bruising lavender and gold now, the edges of dawn beginning to soften everything.
Phainon chances a glance at you. You’re watching the sky change colour like it’s a magic trick only you know the secret to, your expression soft and unreadable. There’s a crease between your brows, faint, but it smooths a little when a breeze picks up and rustles your hair. You look tired, not just from the lack of sleep, but from the kind of exhaustion that sinks into a person when they’ve seen too much, done too much, but still can’t stop moving.
The diner sign glows into view at the end of the street—warm yellow and flickering red, letters half-burnt out so it reads INE R & GILL if you squint. There’s a figure leaning against the counter inside, wiping down the same spot with a rag that’s probably older than both of you, and the place smells faintly of grease and syrup.
You pause in front of the glass door, one hand on the handle. “This place okay?”
“It’s perfect,” Phainon says before he can stop himself.
You smile and push open the door. The bell on top jingles, and the waitress glances up from the far end of the counter. She gives you both a once-over, raises a tired brow at Phainon’s boots and long sleeves, and gestures to a booth without asking questions. That’s the nice thing about New Okhema City; nobody cares too much.
You slide into a booth with a contented sigh. Phainon sits across from you, knees knocking against the underside of the table. The vinyl squeaks under his weight, and the Formica is sticky, but he doesn’t care. His hands feel strangely clean without gloves. The menu sticks to his fingers when he flips it open.
You don’t even bother looking at yours. “Waffles, scrambled eggs, hash browns. Extraw syrup.”
“That specific, huh?” Phainon says.
You shrug. “Gotta know your diner defaults.”
The waitress arrives with two glasses of water and a notepad. “You kids look like you’ve been up all night,” she says, though she can’t be more than a few years older than you and Phainon.
“We have,” you say sleepily, “but we cracked a supervillain conspiracy, so it was worth it.”
The waitress doesn’t blink. “Coffee?”
“Yes, please,” you say, and Phainon nods too, grateful. She leaves without another word.
Silence stretches between you again, but it’s easy now, filled with warmth. The sky outside shifts more boldly into gold and peach, casting long shadows against the window. Phainon leans back into the booth and lets himself exhale slowly, deeply.
Your foot brushes against his under the table. He freezes. You don’t move it.
He looks up, and your eyes meet his over the rim of your water glass. There’s something quiet there, soft around the edges—exhaustion, sure, but something else too. A kind of trust he’s not sure he deserves. (Still, it’s there.)
Phainon thinks about how this shouldn’t be possible. How the night started with fear and screaming and blueprints of his body, and somehow ended with this booth, this silence, this person across from him.

[18:04] Detective Brain: Spidey-lookalike broke into storage depot by Kephale Plaza. I’m already on scene. It’s not you, right?
[18:05] Detective Brain: Phainon. Please respond.
Phainon is already out the window by the time your second text comes through, barely bothering to latch it behind him. His fingers fumble for the web shooter at his wrist, and his heart is a fist hammering against his ribs. He almost misses the first jump—lands hard on the ledge and has to steady himself with a rough palm against brick.
He doesn’t even suit up properly. His gloves are half-fastened, the zipper of his suit stuck one-fourths of the way up his spine, but there’s no time to care. Phainon swings hard across the city’s mid-rises, momentum jerking through his shoulders, his aim slightly off with each launch. It doesn’t matter. He’ll take a bruised wrist if it gets him to Kephale Plaza thirty seconds faster.
Kephale Plaza is a glass-and-steel monstrosity, flanked by wide loading docks and a security perimeter that no longer seems to matter. Phainon can hear the distant thrum of police radios as he swings into the industrial district, following the echo of sirens. Squad cars line the street outside the storage depot, lights flashing in fractured red and blue across the cracked pavement. Officers are forming a perimeter, but there’s no crowd. They’re keeping it quiet.
He lands on the roof of an adjacent building, crouched low as his eyes sweep the scene.
He finds you posted just outside the warehouse’s side entrance, pacing like you’re trying not to burst out of your own skin. Your bulletproof vest is cinched tight, and your standard issue sidearm is still holstered—but your fingers are twitching near it, like you’re weighing every possible outcome of the past ten minutes. Your hair’s tied back, but loose strands stick to your face from the sweat already clinging to your skin. He’s never seen you look so still and restless all at once.
He leaps down from the rooftop, landing in a crouch just behind a darkened patrol vehicle. No one sees him yet. He keeps to the shadows as he makes his war towards you.
The second you hear the shuffle of his boots, you whip around—and relax just as fast.
“Jesus,” you exhale, taking a step forward. “Okay. Okay, thank God. I wasn’t sure you’d even seen the message.”
“I left the second I did,” Phainon assures. “What’s the situation?”
Your lips tighten, and you turn, nodding for him to follow you a few paces away from the rest of the officers. Behind you, the front entrance to the warehouse stands yawning and dark, a single loading dock shutter half-raised.
“It showed up fifteen minutes ago,” you say, pulling out your phone and flicking to the security cam footage. You angle the screen towards him. “Took out the motion sensors, and walked in through a window on the north side. No sign of forced entry—it knew exactly where to go.”
The footage is grainy, flickering, but the figure is unmistakable.
It moves like him. Too much like him. In the footage, the figure slinks down the hallway with the same kind of gait Phainon sees in himself. Every footfall, every pause, every angle of entry—it’s like watching him pace through a mirror.
Only this version is sleeker, meaner. Its limbs are thicker with muscle plating, and its suit—if you could even call it that—is matte-black with streaks of purple circuitry flashing along the ribs and spine. There’s no emblem, no mask markings, just a blank, silver faceplate that reflects the ceiling lights like a shuttered camera lens. One blink and it’s gone, vanishing into the blind spots of the camera feed like it knows exactly where every pixel falls.
Phainon swears under his breath. “They built it,” he mutters. “That’s Flame Reaver.”
You glance up. “You sure?”
He nods. He’s gone through your stolen documents so many times that it feels like they’ve been branded into his skull. “Positive. Same proportions, same gait. But it’s not scanning the building. It’s buying time.”
“For what?”
Phainon doesn’t answer at first. He’s too focused on the still-looping footage. The moment the prototype slips out of view, he sees it—a flicker of something. It wasn’t raiding. It wasn’t looking for intel. It walked into that depot like it had a schedule to keep.
The realisation hits him like a slap to the sternum.
“Wait,” he says sharply. “Where’s your radio?”
You blink. “What?”
“Your radio,” he repeats, scanning your hip and vest and frowning when he sees the wire coiled but your earpiece missing. “You always keep it on.”
“I took it out for a second. There was interference on the line.”
“No.” Phainon turns, scanning the scene again with a new sharpness in his eyes. “No, that’s wrong. This—this whole thing—it’s not a distraction. This is the distraction.”
“What are you—”
His head whips around, eyes scanning the perimeter. You were just here, right beside him, one step behind. Your breath was fogging the air. You were talking.
Now you’re gone.
Phainon’s heart lurches.
“Where is she?” he hisses aloud, and suddenly he’s on the move—scrambling up onto the nearest shipping crate, trying to get height, trying to see. The precinct line’s holding firm around the building. There’s no breach. No one has come or gone.
Except you. Except whoever—or whatever—came for you.
He swings to the rooftop in seconds, breath tight in his lungs, wind clawing past his ears. His eyes sweep the blocks below in sharp, jerking passes—alley to alley, rooftop to ground, looking for anything that feels off.
On the north side, nestled between two disused factories and a rusted chain-link fence, an unmarked van idles in a narrow alley, almost hidden in the dip of a service road. Its brake lights pulse once, too soft to draw attention, but deliberate. A second later, the engine stutters and dies. The door clicks shut. Phainon stills.
From this height, the sounds of the city thin into a muffled hush: sirens echoing somewhere far behind him, police radios buzzing with disjointed chatter. But that alley, that van—it’s too smooth, too clean. There’s no urgency to it, no panic. Just the slow, mechanical precision of something following protocol.
A figure steps away from the van, heading down a side street without looking back. Their stride is steady. Familiar.
Phainon freezes.
It looks like you: the same jacket, same utility belt, even the soft sway of your hair against your collarbone. Your badge glints faintly under the streetlight—your badge. Not a replica.
Except it’s wrong. You’re not there.
You wouldn’t leave the perimeter without backup, wouldn’t ditch your squad without a word, or abandon the very scene that had triggered every instinct in your body just ten minutes ago. At least, not without telling him.
And whoever—or whatever—this is, it’s walking away like it knows the exact timing window it’s working with. Like it wants him to follow.
“They’re splitting us up,” Phainon breathes, the words ripping themselves from his throat. Suddenly, the air feels thinner, sharper. His lungs burn.
He doesn’t hesitate, doesn’t even think before launching himself off the rooftop with a grunt, webline snapping out, slicing through the fog-damp air. He swings low, barely clearing a lamppost, and lands in a crouch beside the van. He can smell petrol, faintly.
Phainon yanks the door open. It’s empty—no driver, or equipment. Just the sharp, sterile scent of plastic and ozone. It’s a burner vehicle, then. One they didn’t plan on keeping.
“Damn it,” Phainon curses under his breath. He spins on his heel, already moving—until he hears a faint crackle. The buzz of a police radio. Your police radio.
He follows the sound, weaving between crates and dumpsters until he skids to a stop at the mouth of the alley, and finds your comm unit on the ground. One of the earbuds still dangles loosely from the coil, blinking a faint blue every few seconds. The rest of the radio is scuffed; not broken, just discarded deliberately, placed just far enough from the van to suggest you followed something willingly—until it was too late.
A boot scuff mars the concrete nearby. There is another drag mark next to—a toe, maybe. Someone shifted. Or struggled. Phainon crouches low, brushing his fingers across the ground. His mind races through probabilities, scenarios. None of them are good.
It wasn’t just a prototype in the warehouse. That was the shell, a puppet to get the cops talking, to trigger an investigation. Something visible, something obvious.
But this was the play: lure him in with the decoy, use it to lock the precinct’s attention, then send the real threat to steal what they really needed—you.
Phainon grits his teeth as he stares down at your radio. His mind flashes to the schematics you’d shown him on your wall. Neural mimicry, behavioural mirroring, photo-accurate masking. It wasn’t a bluff. They had footage, voice samples, enough to build a close-range approximation of him. They’d studied him down to the limp in his left knee.
Of course they had enough on you. You were the officer who was most often assigned with the task of tracking him down, after all.
He thinks of your laugh; the way you tilt your head when you’re about to argue; the furrow in your brows when you’re thinking too deeply. If they’ve copied that—you—down to the way your voice hitches when you say his name—
His stomach flips.
“They took her,” he says aloud, more to steady himself than anything else. “They took her.”
Phainon’s fingers twitch, curling tight into fists. His web shooters press firm against his wrists. His gloves are still half-fastened. He fixes them now, fastens every strap, zips his suit the rest of the way up roughly. The breath in his chest is shallow and burning, but his hands are steady.
He swings back up to the rooftop, lands in a three-point crouch, and bolts across the ledge without a second thought. Every muscle in his body knows where he’s going: the old R&D site, the remnants of what used to be the government-sanctioned Theoros Labs.
It’s a twenty-minute drive through the industrial corridor to get there. He’ll make it in seven.
Every swing feels sharper now, each launch of webbing tighter, more exact. The buildings blur past him, and his breath comes in hard, rhythmic exhales. He can’t afford to be wrong. Can’t afford a detour. The further they pull you away, the less chance he has of reaching you before whatever they built decides it doesn’t need you alive.
Phainon lands on a rooftop, skids into a roll, fires another web and propels him back into the air. Hold on, he thinks. Please, just hold on.

The air near Theoros Labs smells like ozone and old metal.
Phainon lands hard on the broken rooftop of a utility shed just outside the main building. It’s darker here than it should be. The outer perimeter lights have all been shut off, either manually or by remote override. Only a few flickering emergency bulbs remain, casting a jaundiced glow over the facility’s skeletal frame. Ivy creeps up the cracked walls, half-swallowing faded corporate logos and biohazard signs. The chain-link fencing has been torn down in places and rusted through in others.
It’s too quiet.
He moves carefully, sticking close to the shadows as he approaches the main entrance—what’s left of it. The glass doors have been forced open, one of them dangling from its hinges. Inside, the lobby lies still and cold, floor tiles coated in dust. But someone’s been through recently. Fresh boot prints disturb the grime, overlapping in frantic patterns. You were here. He follows your footprints past collapsed hallways and rusted biohazard doors. Most of the rooms are stripped—just empty labs and decaying workstations—but the deeper he gets, the cleaner it becomes. Dust thins. Wires appear. Lights flicker to life as he passes.
They’ve reactivated the lower level. Phainon descends a wide staircase lined with old safety tape. The sub-basement has power. Soft white fluorescents hum overhead. The floor is concrete, sealed and buffed, with clean drag marks across it. The walls are lined with black server towers, cords feeding into sealed doors.
Phainon stops mid-step; there’s a tingle in the back of his neck. Someone else is here, too. His muscles go taut, fingers curling half-ready near his web shooters.
“Ah, Mr. Spider-Man,” a voice drawls, drawing out the vowels. “Or should I say… Phainon?”
There’s a hiss behind one of the sealed doors to the left. A vent releases a thin ribbon of steam.
“Don’t be shy. You’ve already made it farther than most,” the voice says, and this time, it’s accompanied by footsteps echoing against the polished concrete, slow and confident. “I imagine you have questions. That’s good. I admire curiosity. It’s a very human trait.”
The man who steps into view is tall, lean, draped in a sleep lab coat far too pristine for a place like this. His shoulder-length hair is slicked back, and most of his face is covered by a visor. His ID badge is clipped to his chest, name and clearance codes etched in a crisp black print.
LYCURGUS – Division Lead, Neuroadaptive Intellitron Systems.
Lycurgus smiles like he’s greeting an old colleague. “This facility was never truly abandoned, you know. That was just a convenient myth. Theoros was… restructured. Privatised. Reoriented towards more ambitious pursuits.” He gestures to the space around him. “Welcome to our prototype cradle. Or, as we researchers like to call it, Stage Zero of Irontomb.”
Phainon’s voice is low, sharp. “Where is she?”
“Your detective, yes?” Lycurgus says. “She is safe. Unharmed, though mildly sedated. She’s being prepped for mapping. It’s better if she doesn’t wake up mid-scan—the sensory feedback can be unpleasant.”
Phainon steps forward. “You’re going to let her go. Now.”
“Oh, I’m afraid that’s not going to happen.” Lycurgus tilts his head. “She’s far too important. As are you.”
He moves towards a glass-paneled observation window. Behind it, a dark chamber pulses with slow, blue strobe lighting. Machines hiss softly within. Something looms in the shadows—taller than a man, hunched forward, hooked into a loading rig like a sleeping animal.
“I know what you think we’re doing here,” Lycurgus continues. “Mass production. Automation. Violence. And, to be fair, yes—we are building weapons. But not just weapons. We’re building evolution.”
“You’re building copies,” Phainon corrects.
Lycurgus lets out a chuckle, quiet and indulgent. “Flame Reaver was a crude iteration. Incomplete, too reliant on mimicry. It served its purpose—chased its prey, gathered its data, misled your little precinct. But Irontomb… Irontomb will do more than chase. It will predict, integrate, override, think.”
He turns back to Phainon. The placid smile fades, replaced with something hungrier.
“We’ve spent years reverse-engineering your every decision. Every rooftop sprint. Every moment of hesitation. Every kill you didn’t make. We mapped your instincts, modeled your reflex latency, simulated the split-second calculations behind your webbing patterns. All of it.”
He taps the side of his own head. “But it wasn’t enough. Something was missing. Something the data couldn’t replicate.”
“You mean her.”
“Yes.” Lycurgus’ smile returns, tight and reverent. “Your control variable. Your compass. We needed to understand how a creature like you formed attachments, what altered your judgement. What humanised you.”
Phainon’s voice is a growl. “She’s not a variable.”
“She’s your pivot, Spider-Man. The reason your risk matrix fluctuates. The reason you pause before you strike. She made you less efficient, and, therefore, more valuable. Which is why we modeled her too. Her responses, her patterns, her tone modulation, her biometric data when she’s afraid. It’s poetic, really. We used her to finish the algorithm that began with you. The perfect balance of speed and restraint.”
The lights behind the glass pulse brighter. The figure in the chamber stirs. It’s not the Flame Reaver. It’s something else.
Its silhouette is bulkier than his, but it looks wrong. It has slender limbs with plated joints; a split mask—half red, half mirrored black; a narrow torso fitted with impact dispersal panels. Something that looks like a spine runs down its back, glowing faintly green. Phainon doesn’t recognise the material, but he can feel the heat rolling off it through the glass.
“It’s a neural sync model,” Lycurgus says, not even trying to hide his pride, “coded from your reflexes and her empathy thresholds. It’s capable of piloting independently or under network command. It doesn’t hesitate. It doesn’t panic. And, most importantly, it doesn’t forget.”
Phainon’s heart hammers. His blood feels like it’s gone cold. “You’re trying to make a Spider-Man that doesn’t need a person inside.”
Lycurgus meets his eyes. “Exactly.”
The machine twitches, then steps forward. Its footfalls are silent. Too smooth.
“You two were only ever reference material,” Lycurgus intones. “And now that the template’s complete—well. All we need are the final scans.”
“Where is she? Where is she?”
It’s all Phainon can do to stop himself from ripping Lycurgus’ throat out. The scientist merely adjusts the sleeve of his lab coat, as if the demand were a mild inconvenience.
“She’s nearby,” he says coolly. “Lower containment. Cell B-4, off the neural calibration wing. You won’t get far without triggering lockdown, of course. And even if you do—by the time you reach her, Irontomb will already be online.”
Behind the glass, the machine lifts its head. The sound it makes isn’t mechanical. It’s worse—soft, distorted, like the playback of a familiar voice through cracked speakers. It twitches once, then again, shoulders rolling into a combat stance eerily like his own.
Phainon doesn’t wait. He fires a webline directly at Lycurgus and yanks. The man stumbles, but Phainon slams him against the server wall hard enough to knock the breath out of him. Wires clatter. A tower crashes sideways.
Lycurgus laughs, even as Phainon pins him in place. “You think you’re here to save her,” he says, breathless, “but you’re too late. She’s already part of it.”
“I swear to God—” Phainon hisses, pressing the heel of his palm to Lycurgus’ throat. “I swear to God, if you touched her—”
“I didn’t have to,” the man croaks. “She volunteered. Not knowingly, of course. But those scans she took from our systems? They included a compressed tracer file. As soon as she opened them, our systems opened her. The sync began the moment she pieced it together. Everything she knows—tactical behaviour, voice modulation, interrogation strategy—it’s all feeding the AI as we speak.”
“You fed off of us.” Phainon’s grip tightens. Lycurgus grunts.
“Yes,” the scientist says. “And you should be proud. Irontomb won’t just replicate your choices—it will refine them, strip away all the guilt, the softness. It will be cleaner. Smarter. Perfect.”
Something shudders behind the glass. The observation lights dim.
A low thrum starts up from behind the glass, like a heartbeat filtered through static. The strobe pulses once, then again, casting the chamber in a deep, electric violet. Inside, Irontomb lifts its hand with unsettling grace and slowly curls its fingers into a fist. The joints click into place with too much precision. A webline ejects—thin, metallic, laced with a crackle of electric current—and shoots into the rafters. It latches onto the ceiling brace, and just like that, the chamber is empty.
The reinforced door behind Phainon slams open with a hydraulic hiss. He whirls around. Lycurgus barely has time to flinch before Phainon’s hand closes around his collar and hurls him to the ground. The scientist crashes into the wall beside a rack of servers, skull cracking against plastic. A second later, the emergency klaxons explode to life, screaming overhead in jagged bursts.
CONTAINMENT BREACH. HALL A-7. PRIORITY UNIT ACTIVATED.
Red warning lights flare to life, pulsing in harsh rhythm. The sterile corridor floods with shadow and noise. Phainon bolts.
There’s no time to think—he fires a webline into the open mouth of the elevator shaft and dives. Wind roars past his ears. He drops three floors in seconds, catches himself on a rusted support beam, and slams down onto the concrete sublevel with a bone-jarring thud. His boots hit the ground hard enough to rattle the pipes overhead.
The lower corridors are not like the rest of the facility. There’s no dust, no decay. These halls are clean, too clean—like the world above was only a façade. Bright, artificial light hums from the ceiling. Every footstep echoes.
He sprints forward, ducking under support beams and sliding past corners. NEURAL CALIBRATION →, the wall tells him. He follows the signs, pulse thundering. Every flicker of motion at the edge of his vision makes him tense. Every blinking light feels like a red eye watching.
Phainon skids to a halt in front of a door labelled Cell B-4.
The door is solid, made of reinforced steel with a flat-panel biometric reader. There’s no handle, or keypad. Phainon swears. “Come on, come on—”
From the other side, something shifts. He hears a voice, muffled and strained. “...Phainon?”
He chokes on relief. “I’m here.”
You’re alive.
He scrambles to his web shooter, fingers flying over the dial. He adjusts the pressure valve, toggles it to maximum discharge, and fires at the scanner from point-blank range. The panel erupts in sparks. Circuits shriek. The door eases open, exhaling sterile, recycled air into the hallway.
You’re inside, strapped to a containment recliner, limbs limp but intact. Wires trail from your temples, your clavicle, your pulse points. A monitor nearby is still running diagnostics—waveforms still climbing and falling in time with your heart. Your eyes crack open, bleary, and your head lolls to the side.
“Hi,” you whisper, voice thin as gauze.
“Hi, yourself,” Phainon says, crossing the room with long strides. His voice breaks.
His hands go straight to the leads, fingers trembling as he tears them free. Adhesive snaps off skin. Electrodes clatter to the floor. He moves gently, cradling your jaw to keep your head upright as he removes the final lead from behind your ear.
He lifts you from the chair. Your body sags against his chest, legs folding beneath you. You groan softly as your feet try to hold your weight, but he doesn’t let them. He tightens his grip until you’re fully anchored against him. You smell like static and sedation. Like cold metal and something scorched.
“Irontomb,” you breath, half-slurred. “It’s awake. It… used me. Ran simulations. My voice. My—”
“I know,” he murmurs. “I know. We’re getting out of here.”
You lean heavier into him with every step he takes away from the chair. Your breathing is uneven, shallow. But Phainon can tell you’re coming back—your pulse steadying, your fingers twitching where they rest near his collar. He wants nothing more than to get you out, to break every wall between here and the surface, to make you forget this place ever existed.
But the walls hum. The lights tremble. He’s not fast enough. The reinforced door behind him explodes inward.
Irontomb barrels through in a burst of silver and red. The strobe overhead flickers with the force of its entry, casting the scene in freeze-frame shadows. It doesn’t look like a machine as it charges. Phainon spins, turning his back to the blast to shield you. Debris pelts his shoulder as the room shakes. Irontomb stops, silent and still, in the doorway. Its mirrored mask splits slightly, revealing a narrow gleam of green light that pulses in rhythm with the lithium core humming somewhere deep inside it.
The voice it speaks with is your own.
“Phainon.”
The blood drains from his face.
You stir weakly in his arms. “That’s not—that’s not me—”
“I know,” he whispers.
It tilts its head, mimicking the motion exactly. “You hesitate at a 3.2% deviation rate when she’s within ten feet. Your aim skews left. Your heart rate spikes.”
Phainon doesn’t respond. He adjusts his grip around your waist, gently easing you towards the floor behind him.
“You always protect the variable, even when the variable is hunting you down,” Irontomb says. “That makes you predictable.”
Phainon doesn’t wait for it to move. He fires. A blast of webbing snaps towards the machine’s legs—but it dodges, not quickly or instinctively, but perfectly. It anticipates his angle, catches the web in midair with one mechanical hand, and yanks hard.
Phainon is ripped forward off his feet and slammed into the wall hard enough to fracture plaster. He recovers fast, flipping up and sticking to the ceiling. His shoulder throbs. The moment Irontomb lunges again, he launches, meeting it midair. They clash in a whirl of webbing, steel, and bone. Irontomb fights like it’s studied him for years—and it has. It parries his kicks, reads the tension in his arms before he swings. It knows where he’ll move before he does.
Every strike Phainon throws is met with a calculated block, every dodge answered with a counter-blow. The machine is faster. Stronger. But not desperate—and Phainon is desperate.
“The server room!” you shout, and Phainon sees you staggering up to your feet, still valiantly trying to fight whatever they injected into your bloodstream. “Take it to the server room! Follow me!”
Phainon doesn’t hesitate. He hears your voice—unsteady, but clear—and that’s all he needs. He spins midair, flips back onto the ceiling, and fires a pair of quick weblines towards Irontomb’s shoulders. They stick, just barely. The machine lunges to rip them off, but Phainon yanks hard, using the momentum to slam Irontomb face-first into the far wall with a screech of metal on metal. The moment the machine hits, Phainon’s already moving.
“Go!” you shout again, breath ragged. “Don’t fight it here—they control the lithium core from the server room!”
Phainon tears towards you, lands beside you, and sweeps an arm around your waist to stabilise you just as you start to buckle. Your skin’s cold with effort, sweat sheening your forehead, but your grip on his suit is firm.
“Can you run?” he pants.
“Can you carry me?”
He grins through bloodied teeth. “Always.”
He hooks one arm under your legs and lifts you effortlessly, pivoting towards the corridor just as Irontomb peels itself from the wall. The lights in the hallway ahead flash red with the alarm, casting everything in pulses of warning. Phainon doesn’t look back. He runs.
You clutch at his shoulder as he barrels down the corridor, webbing the corners ahead of him to pivot faster. Irontomb’s footsteps are thunder behind you—precise, mechanical, relentless. It doesn’t rush. It doesn’t pant. It just follows, its gait perfectly even as it absorbs every new piece of data from your movement, your trajectory, your speed.
“It’s learning again,” you murmur.
Phainon grits his teeth. “Tell me where to go.”
“Left!” you gasp, pointing weakly down the branching corridor as you cling to his shoulder. “The blueprints said the server room was by the freight lift, and I—I stole Lycurgus’ key card before he sedated me—”
Phainon veers sharply, feet sliding for purchase on the slick floor as he swings you into the left hallway. Behind him, Irontomb adjusts its trajectory instantly, recalibrating mid-chase, its movements eerily silent save for the low whir of its servos and the electric buzz of its core. Every footstep lands with surgical precision, not wasting an ounce of energy.
He finds the lift shaft up ahead, the gate already torn off its hinges—someone had passed through here in a hurry. Phainon doesn’t stop running. He fires a webline to the upper scaffolding and swings both of you through the open shaft.
The moment you’re both airborne, Irontomb enters the shaft behind you. You hear it climbing. It doesn’t need webbing. It’s fast, powerful, climbing straight up the walls like a spider. A cold burst of static prickles the back of your neck as you look over Phainon’s shoulder and see its split-face mask glowing faintly with that same green hum pulsing in time with your own heartbeat.
“Don’t look down,” Phainon mutters through clenched teeth.
“You mean don’t look up,” you reply, voice tight.
He doesn’t argue. Two more floors. That’s all you need.
Phainon angles towards the next level’s opening, yanks hard on the web, and swings both of you clean through it. You hit the ground hard, momentum rolling you both across the floor in a rough tumble. He absorbs most of the impact—shoulder first, then hip—but keeps you tucked in his arms the whole way.
The server room’s door looms ahead, sealed with thick glass and reinforced by a biometric panel.
“Can you override it?” he asks, already placing you down on your feet.
You stagger once, then nod. “I—I can try.”
Phainon presses a palm to your lower back, steadying you as you stumble towards the wall-mounted keypad. You swipe your stolen access card—Lycurgus’ clearance still hot in the system—and slam your hand against the override scanner. It flashes yellow, then green.
The second the server room door hisses open, Phainon knows it’s wrong. The air is too clean, too still, not like a hospital, but lifeless, like the room itself doesn’t care if he walks in or burns alive. Server towers stretch in columns across the floor, blinking. The lights aren’t just white, they’re clinical, buzzing just above his pain threshold. Everything smells like copper and static and scorched plastic.
At the far end, housed behind reinforced glass, is the core. It pulses, like a heartbeat, except it’s not alive. It’s lithium, it’s electricity, it’s something that was never supposed to breathe—but it is, somehow.
He doesn’t like it.
He crosses the threshold, half-dragging you with him. You’re a weight he doesn’t mind carrying—you’re grounding, real, a reminder that not everything in this godforsaken place is synthetic or made in a lab.
“I’ll buy us a minute,” he mutters.
You don’t respond. You’re already gone—mentally, physically—moving with purpose even though you can barely stay on your feet. He wants to help you, wants to make you sit down, but he doesn’t. You’ve always been like this: stubborn, focused, razor-sharp under pressure. He admires it even when it scares him.
He stations himself at the door, arms braced and knees bent. His ribs hurt. His head’s still ringing from the last slam against the wall. But adrenaline is louder than pain.
The wall explodes. He hears it before he sees it—the thrum of Irontomb’s feet, the deep thunk-thunk-thunk of heavy footsteps.
“Phainon,” it says again, in your voice. “You hesitate at a 3.2% deviation rate when she’s—”
“You said that already, dipshit,” Phainon snarls, hurling himself forward.
He slams into Irontomb. The impact jars through every vertebra in his spine, but he doesn’t stop, doesn’t give it time to recalibrate. His shoulder clips its chest hard enough to knock them both off balance, and they go crashing through a row of server towers in a spray of sparks and shattering plex.
Irontomb hits the floor, skidding, its limbs flailing for a fraction of a second. Phainon’s already on it, knee to the chestplate, webbing its arm to the ceiling in a single fluid movement.
“You don’t get to use her voice,” he spits, voice hoarse, hands shaking as he fires again. Webs stick to its mask, its joints, anything he can reach. “You don’t get to be her.”
Irontomb doesn’t flinch. Its head tilts again, that creepy mimicry sparking rage like gasoline in his chest.
“She is a variable,” it says, still in your voice. “All decisions lead back to her. All risk converges.”
He grits his teeth. “Shut the fuck up.”
It wrenches its arm free from the ceiling and drives a knee into his ribs. Something cracks—he doesn’t have time to find out what. The air is knocked out of him, but he rolls, using the momentum to web-sling up to the overhead rigging.
He fires a line down, yanking hard. Metal groans, and a rack of exposed conduit tears free, crashing down onto Irontomb’s legs. The machine stumbles, crushed under the weight for a beat too long. Enough for Phainon to dive.
He hits it again, fists slamming into metal, fury blinding him. He doesn’t have a plan anymore, doesn’t need one. He just needs to keep it away from you. Even as he fights, he hears the beep of the console across the room, feels the glow of the core intensify.
You’re doing it. You’re actually doing it. Irontomb knows.
It shoves him back with unnatural strength. Phainon hits the wall hard enough to dent the steel. Before he can stand, it’s already halfway across the room, limbs unfurling, shoulder joints clicking, webline primed to fire—
“No,” Phainon croaks. He pushes himself up, panting, every inch of him burning, and fires. Web meets Irontomb’s leg. The pull is immediate. But instead of resisting, he yanks himself towards it—into it—slamming shoulder-first into the side of its neck just as it raises an arm to fire at you.
They crash to the floor, grappling, fists slamming into one another like machines. Except Phainon isn’t one. His body gives, bruises, bleeds. Irontomb’s doesn’t.
“Your biology is compromised,” it says. “You are inefficient, slower, in pain. The variable will not survive long without augmentation.”
“You’re not her,” he spits. “You don’t even sound like her.”
Out of the corner of his eye—through the haze of pain—he sees you rise to your feet, the console spitting warnings in every direction. Your hands hover over the control screen. One more step, one more command—
The core behind the glass begins to scream, not audibly, not to the ears, but inside his skull. Irontomb shudders beneath him. Its limbs jerk erratically, the green glow from its spine flickering. Sparks burst from the plates along its back.
You did it.
Phainon throws himself back just as Irontomb seizes violently, crashing to the floor, limbs twitching. Its mask fractures. Smoke pours from the base of its spine as the lithium core begins to destabilise.
He doesn’t exhale until the lights stop flickering. He’s already moving before the sound fades completely, his muscles sluggish, overworked, body bruised—but moving. His chest is burning. His lungs taste like copper and ozone. His ribs feel cracked. But none of it matters.
You’re still on your knees, hunched over the console, and for one horrifying second, you’re not moving.
“Hey.” He drops down beside you fast. “Hey—hey. You good? Talk to me.”
Your head lolls towards him, eyes glassy with exhaustion but alert. You nod and he catches your weight as you say sideways into his shoulder.
“I’m here,” you say, voice like sandpaper.
“Yeah,” he breathes. “Yeah, you are.”
He pulls off his mask and folds one arm around your back and steadies you against him, his gloved hand cradling the back of your neck, just to prove you’re really here. Still warm. Still breathing. Your heart thuds weakly through your shirt when he presses his other hand to your chest, just fast enough to reassure him that the nightmare hasn’t reset.
You lean into him more fully, your head tucked under his jaw, like you’re afraid to look at the room behind you. Good. You shouldn’t have to. He’ll look for both of you.
The servers are smoking. Irontomb is a heap of metal now, sparking quietly beside the remains of a shattered cabinet. One of its hands is still twitching—reflex, probably. Not real. Not alive.
Still, Phainon keeps you close.
You shift, barely enough to get your mouth near his collarbone. “You okay?”
Phainon lets out something halfway between a laugh and a groan. “Gonna need twelve years of physical therapy. Minimum.”
Your breath catches on a tired laugh. It sounds like a miracle.
“You look like hell,” you murmur, slurring a little now, like the adrenaline’s finally wearing off.
“Yeah, well,” he mutters, pressing his forehead to yours. “You should’ve seen the other guy.”

It’s three in the morning, and the sky is the colour of soot.
The city below doesn’t sleep so much as it holds its breath. The clamour of traffic has thinned to a distant hush, streetlamps stutter, and a single train rumbles across a bridge miles away. Sirens have long gone quiet. No engines scream. No horns beg for way. The night is still, but not gentle.
It’s a stillness born of aftermath—sharp-edged and hollow, as if the concrete itself remembers what happened.
Phainon hangs upside down from a rusting fire escape three storeys above your apartment window, legs hooked neatly over a bar that groans faintly under his weight. He’s perfectly still, suspended in gravity’s indifferent hold, his fingers hanging loose above the cracked sidewalk below.
This is how he thinks best lately: inverted, half a world away from the one that keeps asking him to play hero. The metal is cold through his suit. The air smells like dust.
He’s grown used to these late hours. He’s begun to need them.
After Lycurgus vanished off the grid, escaping into whatever black-market pipelines recycles men like him—scientists with messiah complexes and fingerprints scrubbed clean—Phainon finds his pulse only slows in those long hours between dawn and dusk.
He watches your window. It’s open again, just slightly. It always is now. He’s never asked you why.
The official line is a “biochemical systems breach.” It’s what the public got. But the real reports—classified, sealed, redacted in wide black strokes—told a different story. Theoros Labs didn’t just go rogue; they were funded, sponsored, protected. There was infrastructure behind Irontomb, names buried in layers of clearance, strings running all the way up into the gut of the government. Someone had authorised the prototypes. Someone had approved neural mapping. Someone had known what they were doing.
You’ve testified three times already. You come home each time stiff-backed and silent, eyes rimmed in exhaustion, your voice quieter than usual like you’re still somewhere inside the sterile halls of the oversight committee. You never tell him the details, but you don’t have to. He’s seen the files. He’s seen it in person. He knows what Irontomb made of your voice, how it pitched your laugh, how it whispered his name. He knows what it did to you.
You both have nightmares now.
Sometimes it’s Irontomb itself, eyes burning green behind a mirrored face, moving too perfectly to be real. Sometimes, it’s worse: it’s you, only not. It’s him, only cold. Versions of yourselves that weren’t forged in kindness or fear, but in numbers and algorithms, in prediction models and nerve signal scans. He wakes choking, palms clenched, sweat cold on his back.
That’s when he comes to you, climbing through the window, silent and unmasked. You never greet him. You just shift in bed, roll slightly toward the wall, and make room beneath the blanket without opening your eyes. Some nights he lies on his back and stares at the ceiling. Others, he faces you. Sometimes your fingers find each other under the sheets and tangle in that uncertain, half-asleep way that makes the silence easier to bear.
Phainon stares at your open window, at the way the curtain ghosts inward on the faintest breeze. The world looks soft from up here, but his world is down there, just beyond the windowsill.
He drops from the fire escape without a sound.
The thud of his landing on the balcony is soft. His boots press against the worn stone for half a second before he steps toward your window, one gloved hand brushing the glass as he ducks inside.
Your apartment is dim, lit only by the sleepy spill of orange streetlight filtering through the curtains. The air is warmer here, touched with the faint smell of cinnamon and coffee roast, and the remnants of detergent in your sheets.
You’re curled up under the blanket, spine facing him, shoulders rising and falling in that slow rhythm he’s memorised. He doesn’t know if you’re asleep or pretending. It doesn’t matter. You always know when he’s here. You always leave the window cracked just enough.
He toes off his boots quietly, then strips off the top half of his suit, the fabric sticking to sweat-damp skin. His body aches with something deeper than bruises, like fatigue. But it fades the moment he lowers himself into the mattress behind you.
(He’s in love with you, he’s pretty sure.)

“Do you want to date me?”
The question startles Phainon so much he almost drops the wire he’s threading back into place, and nearly slides off the metal railing altogether. He catches himself with a clatter, boots locking tighter to the beam, arms splayed for balance.
“...Sorry, what?” he calls down.
You’re standing several feet below him, arms crossed, watching him with an unreadable expression—equal parts brave and vulnerable. You don’t repeat the question. You just lift your chin a little, eyes steady.
Phainon blinks at you from his upside-down perch, hair hanging towards the concrete, the city stretching behind him. He’s in his suit, sleeves rolled up, mask bunched around his neck, grease on one knuckle, a thin wire looped loosely around his fingers. The early evening air is warm, golden light pooling along the skyline.
“You—you mean date-date?” he asks dumbly, like there’s another kind.
You nod once, not smiling. “Yeah. Date-date.”
Phainon stares at you, the wire still slack in his fingers. The sunlight’s catching on the edge of your cheekbone, painting it gold. You look so certain, so calm, like you haven’t just thrown his entire nervous system into a tailspin.
He opens his mouth. Closes it. Then he scrubs a hand over his face, smearing a bit of grease across his jawline. “Okay. That’s—just to be clear, you’re asking me if I want to date you. Like, go on dates, hold hands, maybe make out a little? Eat food together that isn’t waffles at five in the morning?”
“You make it sound so romantic,” you say dryly.
“I’m hanging upside down in my Spider-Man suit with wire cutters in my hand,” he says, voice rising an octave. “You kind of caught me off-guard.”
You raise an eyebrow. “You want me to come back when you’re right-side up?”
Phainon laughs, but it’s strained, caught somewhere between breathless and disbelieving. He shifts slightly on the bar. “No,” he says. “No, don’t—don’t go. I just…” His fingers curl loosely around the railing. “You really mean it? Like, seriously?”
You shrug, but your voice softens. “Why would I joke about that?”
“I don’t know,” he says. “I mean, have you met me?”
You walk a step closer, now standing directly beneath him. “Yes. That’s kind of the point.”
Phainon stares at you, still upside down, still blinking like he hasn’t quite caught up with reality. His breath stutters, shallow through parted lips. The last of the sun has dipped below the horizon, and now the city is painted in deepening blue, rooftops etched in sharp lines against a sky the colour of cobalt ash.
You, however, are still golden; still lit from the inside out, like the question didn’t cost you anything, like you didn’t just tip the entire balance of his world in six words flat.
He swallows hard.
“I want to,” he says. “I want to date you.”
You nod, just once. But the tremble in your exhale betrays you. “Okay.”
You shift a little closer to where he’s hanging. The wind tousles your hair. You squint at him.
“Can I kiss you now?” you ask.
Phainon opens his mouth. No sound comes out.
His brain is screaming, Yes, God, yes, obviously, what do you think I’ve been dreaming about every night for the last year? But what actually escapes his mouth is an undignified, “I mean—yeah. If you want.”
You smile, small but warm, and step forward until you’re close enough that he can see the flecks of light in your irises. His pulse pounds at the base of his throat.
“Hold still,” you say.
And Phainon—Spider-Man, night-patroller, rooftop-skulker, awkward wreck of a man in love—holds so, so still.
You reach up, slowly. Your hand is warm as it cups the curve of his cheek. He flinches a little, not because of the touch, but because of how gentle it is. He’s not used to being touched like that. Your thumb brushes the edge of his jaw, dragging across the grease-stained skin. He forgets how to breathe.
Then, you lean in and kiss him.
It’s awkward, at first. The angle’s all wrong. You have to stand on your toes, and he has to tilt just right, his body swaying slightly with the breeze, but none of it matters—not when your lips touch his, not when the world goes so achingly, impossibly quiet. It’s soft, firmer than he expects, and yet not rushed. You kiss him like you’ve wanted to for a long time, like you’ve thought about it, like the moment had already existed somewhere in your mind long before you asked the question.
Phainon melts. He doesn’t move for the first few seconds; just hangs there, lips barely parted, letting you take the lead because he’s terrified that if he so much as breathes, you’ll disappear. But then something in him sparks—an ancient, quiet want—and he kisses you back.
He moves slowly, deliberately, meeting you where you are. His lips are dry and chapped from hours in the wind, but he’s warm beneath them, and his breath hitches in that small, helpless way that always happens around you. He tightens his grip on the bar, as though holding himself in place is the only way to keep from falling for real.
Eventually, you pull away.
His eyes open slowly, lashes low over dark, dazed pupils. His lips are parted, red and kiss-bruised.
“That was…” He clears his throat. “Wow.”
You smile, head tilting. “Still want to date me?”
“I want to marry you,” he blurts, then immediately flushes crimson. “I mean—hypothetically. Not now. Obviously not now. I’m hanging upside down. I’ve got wire cutters in my pocket. But you get the idea.”
You laugh, and he grins.
“Come down, you idiot,” you say, still smiling. “Before your brain floods and I have to explain to emergency services that Spider-Man died because he let his blood rush to his head.”
“Yes, ma’am,” he mutters, already adjusting his grip. With a practiced motion, he swings backward once, then forward, and flips cleanly down onto the concrete beside you in a crouch, landing with a thud and a soft grunt. He straightens slowly, rubbing at the back of his head.
When he looks up again, you’re already walking towards him. You grab the front of his suit, tug gently—and then kiss him again, properly this time. He melts into it, hands hovering at your hips. You take the initiative again, stepping closer, your fingers sliding up his chest to cup his face as your mouth slants against his. The second kiss is deeper, more certain, less careful.
When you pull away, you don’t go far. You rest your forehead against his, both of you breathing hard. His hands settle around your waist now, not hesitant anymore, not unsure.
“You’re sure about this?” he whispers.
“I’m sure.”
“Okay,” he says. “Okay.”
He kisses you again, because he can, because he wants to. Because there’s no machine looming over his shoulder, no countdown, no artificial voice running simulations on how to hurt you best.
There’s only this: you, and him, and the golden hour dimming into twilight. Phainon lets you pull him back into the world right-side up.

Phainon thinks he’s a pretty good boyfriend.
Okay, maybe not, like, great. He has a running tab of things he’s fumbled: texts left on read for six hours because he was halfway across the city chasing someone with rocket boots, half-finished promises to pick up groceries, laundry that’s been folded but never quite put away. Date nights sometimes fall through. Movie plans get postponed. He loses track of time a lot.
But he always comes home. He always makes you laugh, even when you pretend to be annoyed with him. He never forgets the dates that matter, and never lets you go to sleep without hearing that he loves you, mumbled or whispered or scrawled on a Post-It if he’s back late. He’s trying. God, he’s trying.
And right now, looking at you—messy-haired, breathless, flushed and sprawled across the mattress like you belong there, like you belong with him—he thinks maybe he’s doing alright.
Phainon kisses down your ribs, trailing his mouth across your stomach. You shift beneath him, a little restless, a little expectant. He likes that—you trusting him enough to be open like this. It still hits him sometimes, like an aftershock, that you let him touch you like this. That you want him to.
He exhales slowly as he nudges lower, one arm curled under your thigh. His lips brush the inside of your hip, the softness of your skin, and he feels you shiver. Gently, he moves lower, and flicks his tongue over your clit.
You gasp, hand threading into his hair, and he smiles against you, slow and lazy and a little smug. He likes knowing he can do this to you. Likes knowing exactly how your breath hitches when he moves just right. He doesn’t rush. He never does with you. Every motion is measured, learned, almost reverent. He listens—to the catch in your throat, the flex of your fingers, the little half-sigh you try to swallow and can’t.
His grip on your hips tightens as you shift, as your thighs close around his shoulders, and he groans low in his chest, the sound vibrating softly between you.
“Phainon,” you whisper, voice thready. He loves the way you say his name. He hums again in response, and the way you respond to that—your spine arching, your mouth letting loose a litany of moans—makes him want to give you more.
When he finally slides two fingers into you, careful and deep, you let out a sound that makes him smile. Phainon exhales against your thigh, the sound shaky with restraint. Your muscles flutter around him, every inch of you wound tight. He watches you fall apart in increments—your fingers twisting in the sheets, your jaw slack with pleasure, your chest heaving.
“Right there?” he murmurs, half-teasing but wholly focused.
You nod, or maybe you don’t—you’re too far gone to speak, but your body answers for you: the way your hips shift, the way your leg curls around his shoulder, the soft whimper that escapes your lips. He presses in again, just a little firmer, curling his fingers the way he knows you like.
His mouth trails slow kisses along the inside of your thigh, tongue flicking over sensitive skin. He never rushes. He never wants to. Not with you.
“Phainon,” you breathe again. “Oh, fuck—”
He presses his mouth back to your folds, his fingers still working inside you with the same care. He’s mapping you like he’s been doing since the beginning—like every sigh is a star to chart by, every moan a signal flare. He’s learned to read you in a language no one else gets to learn.
You’re shaking now, your whole body strung tight as wire beneath his mouth. Your nails bite into his shoulder and you don’t even seem to notice—don’t seem to care—because you’re so close, teetering at the edge of your orgasm, sharp and sweet and inevitable.
A few more strokes and sucks and licks have you coming for him—arching, gasping, crying out his name. When the aftershocks start to fade, he eases off, kisses the softest parts of your skin as you tremble under him. His fingers slip from you gently. He brushes a hand over your thigh, up your hip, until he’s sliding over you again, kissing a slow trail back up your ribs and chest until he’s beside you.
Your eyes are closed, lips parted, still catching your breath. He watches you—eyes half-lidded, lashes damp, chest rising and falling—and then you blink up at him, a smile tugging at your lips like you’re not quite sure how to speak yet. Your skin is still warm, flushed in a way that makes Phainon want to memorise every inch of you all over again.
He brushes his knuckles over your cheek in that way he does when he doesn’t know what to say. “Still in there?”
You blink once, then smile with that crooked little grin he loves. “Ask me again in five minutes.”
He huffs a soft laugh and shifts to lie beside you, propping himself up on one elbow. His hand trails lazily over your stomach, fingers smoothing across the soft skin just above your hipbone, drawing idle shapes.
“Not bad for a guy who forgot to buy milk this morning, right?” he says.
You laugh and shove his shoulder. “Phainon!”
“I mean, I might’ve failed you on the breakfast front, but I like to think I made up for it in… other areas.”
You scoff, but it’s half a laugh, and the sound curls like a ribbon in Phainon’s chest. He watches the way your face softens when you’re amused—how your eyes crinkle at the corners, how your mouth fights not to smile wider.
“That’s debatable,” you say, rolling to face him fully.
“Oh, come on,” he says. “You sounded pretty convinced a few minutes ago.”
“Don’t let it go to your head.”
“Too late.” Phainon grins, and leans forward to bump his forehead against yours.
He feels like his heart’s trying to claw its way out of his chest, not in the life-threatening, nine-storeys-up, villain-hurling-him-off-a-building kind of way, but the kind where it’s just him and you, tangled in sheets, skin flushed. The kind of moment that makes his brain go a little fuzzy and his chest go tight, because he’s pretty sure this isn’t just a good day—it’s the day. The one people write songs and poems and stupid rom-coms about.
(You’re right there, inches from him, breathing the same air, and all he can think is: I hope I never forget this.)
He tries to play it cool, like he’s not falling apart from something as small as the curve of your smile, the way your fingers brush along his jaw like you’re trying to memorise him right back. But it’s a losing battle. He’s smiling too hard, the stupid kind that tugs at his cheeks.
“You’re staring,” you say.
“Yeah,” he says, without even pretending otherwise. “I know.”
His hand is still on your waist, the tips of his fingers tracing small, slow patterns into your skin. He wants to tell you a thousand things—about how he’s never felt safer than he does when he’s beside you, about how it doesn’t matter if the world ends tomorrow so long as he got to know what your laugh sounded like when it was just for him. But the words get stuck somewhere behind his teeth.
You roll your eyes at him like you always do when you’re trying not to smile. “What are you thinking?” you ask.
Phainon opens his mouth to say something clever. He doesn’t. Instead, he says, “That I like you.”
“Yeah?” you say teasingly. “I had no clue.”
He smiles. “Sometimes I think this isn’t real. Like I’m gonna wake up in some busted rooftop vent or in the middle of a car chase, and all this’ll just be some nice dream I had when my brain was low on oxygen.”
“It’s real,” you whisper. “Do you want me to kiss you like real people do? Because I will. Don’t test me.”
(Phainon kisses you first, just to prove he’s real enough to do it.)

#phainon x reader#hsr x reader#hsr x you#hsr x y/n#phainon x you#phainon x y/n#honkai star rail x reader
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