GH Spoilers Cullum confessed the truth after Britt finished the experiment, Peter returned

GH Spoilers: Cullum Confesses the Truth After Britt’s Experiment — Peter Returns

General Hospital spoilers tease that the secret Port Charles tried desperately to ignore finally explodes, leaving no one untouched. What had once been whispered in hallways and buried under half-truths is dragged into the open with devastating clarity: Cullum is revealed to be Faison’s son—and Peter’s brother. The confirmation lands like a bomb, shattering any illusion that Faison’s legacy died with him. Instead, it turns out that legacy was only waiting for the right moment to resurface.

The revelation sends shockwaves through the hospital, the WSB, and every life Faison ever poisoned. Liesl feels it first, the pain hitting her chest with cruel familiarity. She thought she had survived the worst of Faison—his manipulations, the children he destroyed, the family he tore apart. Discovering Cullum feels like reopening an old wound she never truly healed. Memories of Peter come rushing back: her guilt, her love, her terror, and the impossible conflict of wanting to save him while knowing how dangerous he was. Learning that Cullum was shaped by the same darkness leaves Liesl reeling, her sense of balance completely gone.

For Britt, the truth is almost unbearable. She believed the Faison nightmare was finally over after losing Nathan and nearly losing herself. She had convinced herself that the family curse had ended. Instead, Britt is forced to face the reality that Faison had another son—one colder, calmer, and far more deliberate than Peter ever was. Suddenly, Cullum’s unsettling intelligence and eerie composure make sense. He isn’t just dangerous; he’s calculated. Britt feels betrayed, sickened, and haunted by the understanding that her family’s darkness is deeper than she ever imagined.

Nathan’s memory hangs heavily over everything. To Liesl and Britt, he was proof that something good could come from such a twisted bloodline. Cullum’s emergence feels like an insult to everything Nathan stood for, dragging his name back into a legacy of monsters he fought against his entire life.

As the truth settles, it becomes clear Cullum is no ordinary threat. Unlike Peter, whose madness was fueled by desperation and emotional chaos, Cullum is chillingly focused. Every interaction he’s had now carries new meaning. He wasn’t pretending—he was executing a mission passed down through blood. Faison didn’t just leave behind destruction; he left behind a blueprint. And Cullum intends to finish what his father started.

Port Charles begins to unravel as Cullum quietly expands his influence. Files vanish, agents disappear, encrypted messages surface linking back to old Faison safe houses. Rumors spread fast, and fear spreads faster. The city senses something far worse than a return to old violence. This is something planned, structured, and evolving.

The true horror emerges when Britt’s experiment forces Cullum to confess everything. He isn’t satisfied with power alone. Cullum believes Faison’s work—rewriting loyalty, reshaping minds—was genius ahead of its time. He wants to revive it, refine it, and unleash it on a scale even Faison never attempted. To him, Port Charles isn’t a town—it’s a test subject.

Then comes the final, chilling twist: Peter isn’t gone.

Cullum’s ultimate goal isn’t just to honor his family—it’s to resurrect it. With access to WSB technology, rogue scientists, and hidden research tied to past revival projects, Cullum believes death is merely an inconvenience. He sees Peter as fixable, a flawed tool he can perfect. Together, Faison’s mind and Peter’s terror would become the foundation of a new empire.

As Britt, Liesl, and others grasp the full scope of Cullum’s plan, one truth becomes terrifyingly clear: the nightmare isn’t over. It’s evolving. Port Charles is already caught in Cullum’s experiment—and the storm ahead may be worse than anything the town has ever survived.

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