Now for something different. There is a new video game store in my neighborhood called GO GAMES and they actually happened to have a small section with comics. Most of these are foil/hologram stuff from the 90's at inflated prices or signed 90's era IMAGE or VALIENT stuff, but they did have one of those "50 Cent/3 for $1 bins". In the age of eBay and whatnot, these are becoming very rare in normal comic shops. I did some hunting.
TIME-WARP FROM THE 50 CENT BIN:
WHAT IF? (vol.2) #21: Ah, this was like a time warp back to 1991, which was when it was published. The paper is non-glossy. The coloring isn't all fancy-pants digital and is old school dots and colors. The cover price is $1.25, back when a kid could afford a comic without spending, like, half a week's allowance on a single issue. The advertisements are for NES games for THE PUNISHER and WRATH OF THE BLACK MANTA, which were, erm, hardly considered classics for the system. The back cover offers the NES add-on from Konami, the worn-on-head, voice activated LASER-SCOPE, which was a horrible flop to squeeze cash from kids' parents. Oh, and the trading card series, MARVEL SUPERHEROES SERIES 1 was just on the way. You couldn't be a kid in a school yard in 1991 without comic knowledge (even if everyone I knew were still Ninja Turtle fanatics). My Mom had subs for ASM, WEB, THOR, and HULK back then, so I could read comics for free whenever I felt like digging through her room (without getting caught). Those were the days.
This WHAT IF, like many of the time period, focused on Spider-Man; WHAT IF SPIDER-MAN MARRIED BLACK CAT? One of the flaws of these WHAT IF stories is that often knew they could get away with killing off characters, so the writers usually did. The stories usually ended in a somewhat bleak and depressing way. I only purchased a handful of these comics throughout WHAT IF's long run, which ended in the late 90's. This issue is written by Danny Fingeroth and drawn by Jim Valentino.
Watcher, the perennial series narrator, gives the run down; in this universe, Peter broke up with Mary Jane over fears of endangering her life with his career as Spider-Man. Rather than selling his soul to a Hell-Lord, he contacted his old partner Black Cat and rekindled their romance, eventually leading to marriage (which may not have been entirely legally binding, as they married under assumed aliases in Vegas; Peter used one of his tried and true aliases, "Peter Palmer"). Unfortunately, Black Cat was still in her "crazy cat-woman" phase. Let me explain; when she first debuted, she had genuine interest in Spider-Man's secret identity. But back in the 80's, just as now, the idea of Peter settling down with any woman full time scared the bejeesus out of the editorial board. So they decided to just make Felicia a bit crazy and have her all but revile Peter Parker, only being interested in Spider-Man like a crazed groupie. While I always liked the idea of a woman who actually fell for Spider-Man instead of Peter Parker (as most of Peter's lovers, including MJ, had), this seemed a little extreme, as if deliberately made to cause the reader to lose sympathy for Felicia. I recall the letters pages of Spidey comics around this period were full of hate for "Cat" as a result, wondering when Peter would dump "the broad" and stick to MJ. Ah, such simple minded fools. At least he had 20 years with MJ (barely).
The public knew by this period that Spider-Man and Black Cat were crime fighting partners (even then detective Jean DeWolfe knew), and while Cat cared little about secret identities, Peter still had a family and friends to protect. Which meant that Felicia Hardy and Peter could never be seen together, lest someone catch on. This involved all sorts of stealth games with visiting apartments, which usually infuriated Felicia. She also hated that Peter still considered MJ a friend (and vice versa), and was insanely jealous of MJ, all but threatening to assault her if she sent Peter another birthday card. See? "Crazy Cat woman". No fan in the 80's missed her. Also during this period, Silver Sable and her Wild Pack had debuted in ASM and were sometimes involved in his adventures; her Wild Pack consisted of Paladin and Sandman.
The story of course hits things off with a bang when a low-bit hood calls a "mysterious figure" via payphone claiming that by overhearing Felicia one night, he heard Spider-Man's secret identity and is offering it for $1 million. The figure, it turns out, is Adrian Toomes, a.k.a. the Vulture, who kills the hood rather than pay him. He blows up Aunt May's halfway house, but luckily she avoided death by hiding in the basement. Vulture gases Black Cat and sets his trap for Spidey; when Spidey angrily crashes in, the bird-brain chastises him about his blabbermouth partner. Spidey beats the crap out of Vulture before yelling at Cat about how careless she is. Silver Sable shows up and collects the bounty on Vulture, even sharing a cut with Spider-Man. They share a chat at her apartment and discover both of their pasts involve tragedy; Sable warns the web-head to not steel his heart as she had. Spidey tries visiting MJ, but leaves when he finds her dating a guy named "Brad". Vulture tries escaping from Rikers Island, putting a guard in a coma in the process, and is seemingly killed by a shadowy figure. He manages to croak "Spider-Man" as his last words, and suddenly the web-slinger is framed for the death and Sable and her squad are hunting him for the bounty. It turns out that Black Cat (of course) was the one who killed Vulture to protect Peter's identity and try to cover her mistake. When MJ stumbles onto the hectic fight scene, Black Cat grabs her and leaps to a rooftop; Paladin assumes she is taking MJ hostage and fills Felicia full of lead, mortally wounding her (and hardly feeling guilty about it later).
The ending actually interested me. It seems to end in darkness; Felicia dies in Spidey's arms, MJ falls from the rooftop and Peter has his 500th flashback to the death of Gwen Stacy while saving her. MJ leaves Spider-Man behind. BUT, there still is Silver Sable. Having grown closer from the experience, the two become partners and eventually, lovers.
Yes, all that happened within 22 pages. 1991 stories were like that.
The ending interested me because it reminded me a bit of how a recent WHAT IF story went. It came out in Jan. 2008 and it was WHAT IF: SPIDER-MAN VS. WOLVERINE by Jeff Parker, Clayton Henry, with a cover by John Romita Jr. The crux of that was Peter eventually choosing the "darker side" of superhero life, leaving his civilian life in the dust to keep them safe, and embracing the superhero one full on. He wound up with a black ops lover and a level of satisfaction. Danny Figeroth's story basically ends that way about 17 years sooner. Nothing's original, baby.
Naturally, the tale from 1991 shows it's age a bit in many ways. But it was nice for a time-warp.