Jason refuses revenge request, Danny ᴅɪᴇs trying to ᴋɪʟʟ Cyrus General Hospital Spoilers
Cyrus is the one who ᴋɪʟʟᴇᴅ his mother, Sam. But instead of simply grieving or letting the police handle it, Danny is consumed by thoughts of revenge. The pain of losing his mother has taken a deep toll on him, turning into a rage that grows inside him. It’s no longer about justice—it’s about payback. Making Cyrus pay for what he did has become Danny’s sole focus.
Danny, once a carefree boy, is becoming darker by the day. He no longer trusts the system or believes that justice will come on its own. In Danny’s mind, there’s only one way to end it all: get rid of Cyrus once and for all.
This feeling isn’t just a sudden outburst of anger but a profound psychological shift. Danny’s every thought and action now revolves around how to destroy Cyrus. This leads to a dangerous decision. Danny goes to Jason. He knows that if anyone can help him accomplish this goal, it’s his father.
Danny isn’t asking Jason to help the police find evidence. He isn’t asking Jason to expose the truth. He wants Jason to ᴋɪʟʟ Cyrus. Danny’s request isn’t made on a whim but out of conviction that this is the only way. He’s no longer the kid who believed in the law. Sam’s ᴅᴇᴀᴛʜ has taught him the brutal lesson that sometimes punishment must be dealt with by one’s own hand.
This is the moment that changes everything. How will Jason react when he sees his son becoming like him in ways he never intended? This isn’t just about Cyrus anymore. It’s about Danny being on the path to becoming a different version of Jason—a man willing to step into the darkness to find answers.
Jason may agree to help his son, but he also knows that once Danny takes this path, there’s no turning back. If Jason ᴋɪʟʟs Cyrus, will it bring Danny relief? Or will it reinforce his belief that violence is the only way to solve anything?
Darkness is closing in on Danny. If Jason isn’t careful, he could lose his son in ways he never imagined—not because of Cyrus, but because of what Danny is slowly becoming.
Jason was completely shocked by Danny’s request. He never thought his son would come to him with such a terrifying proposition—a request to ᴋɪʟʟ. Not from an enemy, but from the very son he had tried to protect from the dark world he had lived in for so many years.
This was more than just a request. It was a sign that Danny was changing, and not in the way Jason wanted. When Jason looked at Danny, he saw not just a boy grieving the loss of his mother but a reflection of his own past. Anger was slowly consuming Danny, turning his grief into a desire for revenge—just as Jason had acted in the past.
It shocked Jason. Everything he had done, every decision he had made to protect his son from a path of violence, now seemed to be coming back to haunt him. Danny no longer saw Jason as a father figure but as a tool to carry out what he believed was the only way to achieve justice—by ᴋɪʟʟɪɴɢ Cyrus Renault.
Jason knew better than anyone what it was like to be consumed by hatred and haunted by the need to end someone who deserved it. But he also knew that once he set foot on that path, there was no turning back. He had walked that path himself, lived with its consequences, and he didn’t want Danny to suffer the same.
What was more frightening was that Danny didn’t simply want Cyrus ᴅᴇᴀᴅ. He believed it was the only way to achieve justice. He wasn’t just seeking revenge—he was changing in ways Jason never expected.
For the first time in his life, Jason was afraid—not of his enemy, not of Cyrus, but of his son becoming a new version of himself. The version he had tried so hard to protect Danny from.
Danny was no longer just a broken boy. He was becoming a man with an unquenchable rage. One who might enter the world of crime Jason had tried to keep him away from. Jason knew he had to act immediately.
He couldn’t agree to Danny’s demands, but he also couldn’t ignore what his son was going through. If he didn’t act quickly, Danny might find another way to achieve his goal—perhaps by confronting Cyrus himself. Or worse, finding someone else to do the job instead of Jason.
Jason’s decision was no longer just about whether to ᴋɪʟʟ Cyrus. It was about how to save his son before it was too late.