BittyBobcat
Llama hand
Heroes had been in Peter's life for as long as he could remember.
They decorated billboards with bright costumes, posters with catchphrases, and action figures with small details that always seemed to rub away with too much play. The mere mention of presence of one was enough to draw dozens of fans. Their names rested on the lips of newscasters as they reported on their most recent escapades and kids as they debated which one was better (any that claimed they didn't have a favorite were lying).
Peter was no liar (not usually, at least), and his favorite hero?
Buzz.
Anyone claiming to be their biggest fan was wrong because no one else but Peter had spent hours in the training room hanging on their every word of advice. Had shared those small moments on patrol where they would teasingly point at a matchbox for sale and ask if he had a brother. Had been promised to celebrate the 'A' he got on his last Spanish test by being taken out for icecream this week (that promise was broken, but it hardly mattered now).
But when the heroes went missing—when Buzz went missing—Peter didn't worry because he knew they would be fine. They were always fine. In no time, Buzz would be greeting him as he walked into the agency every day and they would be safe and happy and everything would go back to normal again.
Peter just had to hold down the fort until then... which meant he had to get this press conference right.
...Meaning he probably should've been listening to the PR agent they'd assigned to him earlier that week (her name kept slipping his mind) as she went over the game plan one last time. But he wasn't (of course he wasn't), and the only words Peter caught were toward the tail end of the monologue.
"And if they ask about the missing cases—"
"Investigations are underway," He groaned. "We went over it yesterday. And the day before. And the day before that."
"Alright, alright." Claws (the unfortunate nickname Peter had been mentally calling her by) tapped her sharply manicured nails (the reason for the nickname) against her crossed arms. "If you've got it down, then I suppose I'll stop pestering you about it, but—"
"It's really important that this goes well," they chimed in unison (Claws with a slightly squinted glare as the sentence ended).
"Right," She briskly uncrossed her arms to pat him exactly twice on the shoulder—a stiff, but practiced motion that took the minimum amount of time it needed to be considered 'plausibly comforting'. "Well, you've got six minutes until you're on. Go wait in the wing with everyone else."
Eager to be done, Peter nodded and turned to leave the weird nook in the hall that Claws had found for their brief one on one. He was only a few feet away when she called after him, "And if you mess up your hair again, I'll find a way to get you double weight training assigned this week! Got that?"
He was lucky he wasn't facing her, because she surely would've had some sort of comment on his eyeroll. "Yes, ma'am."
~~~
Taptaptap.
It was barely audible among the dozens of other sounds backstage—frantic footsteps, confused whispers, and the incessant buzz of the lights (not to mention the dull roar of the crowd and announcer outside)—but it continued anyway. Quick, rhythmic, and impatient.
Taptaptap.
Gray didn't want to be here among all the cheers and lies. ARC claimed that it was all 'for the good of the community', but that was bullshit and anyone with half a braincell knew it. All they were doing was covering their ass... But he went along with it. He couldn't afford to fuck this up.
Taptaptap.
God, couldn't they just get it over with already?
He was sat in one of the stiff, fold-out chairs in the cluttered right wing of the stage. Though the helmet on his head hid his face, his tenseness still spoke through his body language—the way he leaned to one side of the chair, the tightness with which his arms crossed, and the relentless tapping of his foot against the concrete floor.
Gray didn't flinch when another so-called hero (Matchstick, if he remembered correctly) walked suddenly into the room, but the bouncing of his leg paused for short moment before returning to the same tap-tap-tap rhythm it had held for the past few minutes. He didn't turn his head to see him (the guy was recognizable enough just by the eye-burning brightness of his suit). Instead, he simply watched out of the corner of his eye.
Match was definitely on the younger side, though he wouldn't go so far as to pin an age. Short, thin, and (judging by the way his eyes kept darting between what could be seen of the stage from their vantage point and Gray) nervous. But the kid played it off surprisingly well. He could hear a handful of deeper breaths as Match steeled himself for the debut.
"So... big day, huh?"
Gray bit back a sarcastic reply (which the kid would've received had there not been an obviously anxious quietness to his voice). "Yup."
"Know any of the other heroes yet?"
"No."
Matchstick nodded and hummed, still absently glancing to the stage every now and then as the conversation trailed off, leaving them in a half-silence constantly broken by the stage techs.
Gray shot a glance of his own toward the clock hanging above the doorway.
Five minutes.
They decorated billboards with bright costumes, posters with catchphrases, and action figures with small details that always seemed to rub away with too much play. The mere mention of presence of one was enough to draw dozens of fans. Their names rested on the lips of newscasters as they reported on their most recent escapades and kids as they debated which one was better (any that claimed they didn't have a favorite were lying).
Peter was no liar (not usually, at least), and his favorite hero?
Buzz.
Anyone claiming to be their biggest fan was wrong because no one else but Peter had spent hours in the training room hanging on their every word of advice. Had shared those small moments on patrol where they would teasingly point at a matchbox for sale and ask if he had a brother. Had been promised to celebrate the 'A' he got on his last Spanish test by being taken out for icecream this week (that promise was broken, but it hardly mattered now).
But when the heroes went missing—when Buzz went missing—Peter didn't worry because he knew they would be fine. They were always fine. In no time, Buzz would be greeting him as he walked into the agency every day and they would be safe and happy and everything would go back to normal again.
Peter just had to hold down the fort until then... which meant he had to get this press conference right.
...Meaning he probably should've been listening to the PR agent they'd assigned to him earlier that week (her name kept slipping his mind) as she went over the game plan one last time. But he wasn't (of course he wasn't), and the only words Peter caught were toward the tail end of the monologue.
"And if they ask about the missing cases—"
"Investigations are underway," He groaned. "We went over it yesterday. And the day before. And the day before that."
"Alright, alright." Claws (the unfortunate nickname Peter had been mentally calling her by) tapped her sharply manicured nails (the reason for the nickname) against her crossed arms. "If you've got it down, then I suppose I'll stop pestering you about it, but—"
"It's really important that this goes well," they chimed in unison (Claws with a slightly squinted glare as the sentence ended).
"Right," She briskly uncrossed her arms to pat him exactly twice on the shoulder—a stiff, but practiced motion that took the minimum amount of time it needed to be considered 'plausibly comforting'. "Well, you've got six minutes until you're on. Go wait in the wing with everyone else."
Eager to be done, Peter nodded and turned to leave the weird nook in the hall that Claws had found for their brief one on one. He was only a few feet away when she called after him, "And if you mess up your hair again, I'll find a way to get you double weight training assigned this week! Got that?"
He was lucky he wasn't facing her, because she surely would've had some sort of comment on his eyeroll. "Yes, ma'am."
~~~
Taptaptap.
It was barely audible among the dozens of other sounds backstage—frantic footsteps, confused whispers, and the incessant buzz of the lights (not to mention the dull roar of the crowd and announcer outside)—but it continued anyway. Quick, rhythmic, and impatient.
Taptaptap.
Gray didn't want to be here among all the cheers and lies. ARC claimed that it was all 'for the good of the community', but that was bullshit and anyone with half a braincell knew it. All they were doing was covering their ass... But he went along with it. He couldn't afford to fuck this up.
Taptaptap.
God, couldn't they just get it over with already?
He was sat in one of the stiff, fold-out chairs in the cluttered right wing of the stage. Though the helmet on his head hid his face, his tenseness still spoke through his body language—the way he leaned to one side of the chair, the tightness with which his arms crossed, and the relentless tapping of his foot against the concrete floor.
Gray didn't flinch when another so-called hero (Matchstick, if he remembered correctly) walked suddenly into the room, but the bouncing of his leg paused for short moment before returning to the same tap-tap-tap rhythm it had held for the past few minutes. He didn't turn his head to see him (the guy was recognizable enough just by the eye-burning brightness of his suit). Instead, he simply watched out of the corner of his eye.
Match was definitely on the younger side, though he wouldn't go so far as to pin an age. Short, thin, and (judging by the way his eyes kept darting between what could be seen of the stage from their vantage point and Gray) nervous. But the kid played it off surprisingly well. He could hear a handful of deeper breaths as Match steeled himself for the debut.
"So... big day, huh?"
Gray bit back a sarcastic reply (which the kid would've received had there not been an obviously anxious quietness to his voice). "Yup."
"Know any of the other heroes yet?"
"No."
Matchstick nodded and hummed, still absently glancing to the stage every now and then as the conversation trailed off, leaving them in a half-silence constantly broken by the stage techs.
Gray shot a glance of his own toward the clock hanging above the doorway.
Five minutes.