(01-07-2018, 01:24 PM)Henry of green Wrote: He clearly didn’t take Diania seriously and that’s why he lies dead in the Portland water drains. He suggest Rachel worm her way into Diania’s life because Adalind wasn’t being compliant, Boneparte realized he might have to kill Adalind . He was clearly looking for Rachel to be a replacement for Adalind in Diania’s eyes and that’s why Diania killed Rachel because she thought Rachel was trying to replace her mommy in her and her daddy’s life. Boneparte didn’t give a damm about Diania’s happiness, he threatened her mother and her little brother and nearly killed her mother. He even threatened Adalind that he would hurt Diania if she didn’t comply, Boneparte thought Diania should fear him not the other way round. Even Rachel showed zero fear of Dinaia until she was strangling her with bed sheets only then did Rachel realize her true power. Renard also repeatedly dismissed Diania’s powers only Adalind give Diania the true respect and fear she deserved the rest of the idiots were just treating Diania as a child.
While I think he underestimated her because she was a child, I don't think for one moment Bonaparte didn't take her seriously. He went to a lot of trouble to get Renard into the mayorship as well as a lot of trouble to get Adalind to the mansion. All because Diana wanted it. That's taking a golden child seriously.
But that isn't all that Bonaparte underestimated. Bonaparte underestimated Renard because he thought all Renard wanted was the mayorship. That turned out to be not quite true. He underestimated Adalind because he figured all she wanted was Diana. That turned out to be not quite true.
I think the plan was to keep the three of them (Renard, Adalind, and Diana) together, but to worm Rachel in as a buffer for Bonaparte. It would be Bonaparte who'd be working with Diana to train her to achieve BC goals.
(01-07-2018, 01:31 PM)Robyn Wrote: So do you think there was a possibility that Nick might have joined BC had Bonaparte not taken Adalind and Kelly?No, I was referring to Bonaparte's thought process. Why not first try to sell Nick on how good life could be with BC rather than coerce the mother of his son to leave him?[/quote]
Thanks for the clarification, Robyn. Actually I have been wondering for a long time why Nick didn't lean toward BC.
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