@zamaxsu
It was... like this sickness. In his chest. The sky so clear, so blue, the world rebuilding and Son Gohan sitting atop a building, with a smile on his face. Finally, it felt like the weight off their chests was lifted. The androids were gone, and finally, they could rest. After all this time they could finally rest. Then it happened. The sky ripped open, like a scar splitting the sky. Purple gas sifting out and lightning raining across the sky for a brief moment. Like a supernova in the sky, a storm of black, white and purple... and the energy. The Ki signature. It made Gohan feel like he was being submerged under a tidal wave.
His fists clenched, but he was shaking like a leaf in the wind. When the colors subsided and the sky returned to a peaceful blue color, he hung there like a shadow. Like a splotch of dark paint against a bright canvas. Gohan could see this smile on his face, like someone watching a pack of zoo animals or an ant farm. This wonderment and amazement on his face. His eyes scanning everyone, who stopped in their tracks to marvel at the man in the sky who appeared from the tear like a sudden wonder. Though these people were more cautious, as they had just recovered from the android threat. However, while they were cautious, they were unaware.
While Son Gohan was aware and terrified. There, up in the sky, adorned in black clothes and with healthy skin as bright as the day he returned from Namek... floated his FATHER. His FATHER, supposedly dead, from a heart virus that had no cure at the time. However, there he was. But Gohan was smart. He knew the feeling of treachery, and the energy emanating off this figure was enough too rival even the androids... but this wasn’t some imposter. It wasn’t Turles, or a low class warrior with the same hair style. It was his FATHER. They had the same eyes... the same facial structure.
That was his father.
So why was Gohan so afraid of him? Why could he only stand there and stare with mouth agape, waiting to see what his “father” would do first?
Because he knew that this figure would bring pain and sorrow.















