Blood Ties | By : maiafay376 Category: +S through Z > Silent Hill Views: 6705 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own Silent Hill, nor any of the characters from it. I do not make any money from the writing of this story. |
With his curiosity piqued, but still grieving, Daniel packs everything and moves close to the abandoned town--in the city of South Ashfield. Soon he becomes a new resident of South Ashfield Heights apartments, hoping to piece his life together and move on. However, after one bizarre encounter, Daniel realizes SAH apts. has its own bloody history...
Primarily this is a SH 4 tie in, but will encompass all games eventually. Takes place two years after the events of SH4 and the "death ending."
The Red Pyramid(s) will show around the middle of the story. I take liberties with their origin, since I believe they were there long before James set foot in SH. This is one of the reasons why this story earned the AU label, but not the primary one.Blood Ties
Death of a father, memories, and a strange message…
--------------------Chapter 1: Moving On--------------------
Daniel peered through the rearview mirror with a frown. Yes, so far, the freeway remained clear of his underwear. Immediate relief flooded him, then anxiety twitched in his stomach right after. How long would those cheap cords hold? What was rattling back there? Something was broken, he knew it. Moving was already a pain in the ass, but he had to move with a twenty-year old van, frayed bungee cords barely held the rear doors shut, and every jolt and shudder threatened to spill everything he owned onto the poor vehicle behind him.As if on cue, he noticed something long and black weaving behind the van, and realized his lamp cord had worked itself loose, again. Scowling, he returned his eyes forward, noting with relief that a rest area lay just up ahead. Slowing his speed a bit, he followed the exit.The tiny parking lot was crowded, and it took a few moments of maneuvering around several semi trucks before he could park the van. He found a decent spot near a group of large recreation vehicles that had windows painted with bright green alien faces and streamers trailing from the bumpers and door handles. Many of the occupants milled about outside, all dressed in garish shades of fluorescent green and wearing bobbing antennas the same color. Daniel cocked an eyebrow at the strange sight and sighed. It must be nice to be so frivolous, to have money and time to spend it on silly things. For him, life never had been as carefree.His father had died last week.“Massive coronary” was what they said after the autopsy. The kind that was sudden and severe, giving his father little time to acknowledge what was happening, and even less for a 911 call. Daniel had found him lying on the kitchen floor of their dingy two-bedroom mobile home, beer forming an amber puddle around his head, spreading from the glass his father had shattered in his hand. Surprised gray eyes stared into the distance and contained the look of vague puzzlement, as if death had caught his father while he had been pondering something…His father always had this habit of spacing out when he drank; he would take the Daydream Caboose to La La Land and sometimes stayed for days. Sometimes he stayed longer. He would sit on that ugly ass couch of his; that green-as-mold piece of shit that had his scent baked in so deep that sitting on it was like sitting on his father’s lap…Something that Daniel hadn’t done for a long, long time. He missed that. He missed his father’s smell, his sad sighs when he sat on that couch, drumming his fingers and just staring, staring, staring…staring at what? What are you looking at? he would think. What are you searching for? Why won’t you look at me?Daniel shook himself and cleared his throat, but the images stayed. They remained etched in his memory, seared and aching. The glass. It was everywhere. Broken shards had protruded from his father’s right palm, light winking upon each piece while blood flowed and mingled with the spill. That contrast of colors was what Daniel had remembered most; the streaks of crimson coalescing and pooling under his father’s gaping mouth. His father had bit his tongue when he collapsed--had bit it almost completely through. The blood had stained the floor in scattered splotches and the overpowering smell of beer and shit had lingered for days. Death was an inelegant thing and rarely left a pretty corpse. “Old Ben” would have been mortified at how he appeared in his final moments--especially to his son. His father had always carried himself with dignity, with hard eyes the color of flint, a wry smile, and seemed always on the verge of confession--as if he had secrets he knew he should tell, but could not. Old Ben had never liked talking about the past, least of all his own. It was a mystery that had always fascinated Daniel, and he often wondered when his father would reveal his childhood to him, or divulge some sordid tale about the past.Now, it was too late. Cremated two days ago, his father’s secrets had burned along with him. Secrets forever lost.He had sprinkled his father's ashes over his mother’s grave last week, watching as gray floated and settled upon the crimson roses and feeling…what? What was he feeling? Guilt? Anger? Grief? He had frowned then, the weight of the empty vase he held in his hands suddenly heavy and tried to feel something--something besides that awful numbness inside.Daniel suppressed a wave of guilt and reached for the Pepsi he had waiting in the cup holder. He finished off what remained of the twenty-ounce in a couple of gulps, and let the carbonation burn a trail down his throat.He thought about the past often, especially within the last few days. Regretting and lamenting the relationship with his parents. Growing up, he was always closer to his mother than his father. His father was never home, often working doubles over at GM as a sheet-metal specialist. The job required long hours and even holidays, but his father never complained. His mother was a tutor, teaching elementary students from their home three days a week. No grandparents in sight; both had died when he was very young, and his parents had no siblings. It made Christmas a little lonely, but for the most part he never wanted for anything.He smiled a little as he remembered those early years, and the children who would visit the house. His mother often invited her students for dinner and brunch. He made friends with most of them, although when he grew older, those friends grew less and less. It was five years ago that his mother was killed. She had gone for groceries one rainy morning and never came back. The driver who had collided with her tiny vehicle emerged from the head-on collision with only cuts and bruises--and also quite drunk. He wasn’t wearing a seatbelt at the time and the impact threw him clear. Clear and free, and the moist ground along the roadside broke his fall. Lucky him.They took his mother to the morgue in pieces.While AFF and its agents attempt to remove all illegal works from the site as quickly and thoroughly as possible, there is always the possibility that some submissions may be overlooked or dismissed in error. The AFF system includes a rigorous and complex abuse control system in order to prevent improper use of the AFF service, and we hope that its deployment indicates a good-faith effort to eliminate any illegal material on the site in a fair and unbiased manner. This abuse control system is run in accordance with the strict guidelines specified above.
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