Bold & Beautiful Game-Changer: A Truly Killer Twist Promises to End Luna’s Reign of Terror for Good — and Wait Till You See Who’s Behind It!

   

Bold & Beautiful has left Luna armed and dangerous. But despite the fact that she just bought a gun and aims to use it on stepmother Steffy, we aren’t worried. If you read the spoilers for this week, you aren’t, either. Why’s that?

Although the tease for the Thursday, June 5, episode finds Steffy in the double murderess’ crosshairs, it doesn’t sound like she succeeds in her mission to remove what she sees as the one obstacle to her forging a relationship with newfound father Finn. On Friday, June 6, Luna is back to trying to “work her magic on Bill.” But, the show says, she’s hit with a curveball.

Maybe Bill has finally come to his senses and is going to have Luna sent back to prison. After all, if he could get her out whenever he wants, he could also get her put back in, right? Maybe Luna comes to Bill in a tizzy after failing to send Steffy to an early grave but getting spotted in the process.

“You’ve gotta help me,” we can just hear Luna pleading. “I made a terrible mistake, but like, it totally wasn’t me. It was like somebody else took over my body and pulled the trigger.”

“Save it for your cellmate,” Bill could coldly reply. “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. And kid, you are not fooling me twice.”

Bill Luna B&B

In a weird way, the twist would work in the favor of Luna’s granny, Sheila. It made no sense that she went from cackling with Luna about how men love “naughty” women like them and encouraging her fixation with Will to suddenly telling Tom and Hollis’ killer that it was time to leave L.A. But since “good” Sheila is where we’re at this week — or at least today; the writers can’t seem to make up their minds — she could approach Bill after Luna is sent up the river again.

You know they’d bump into each other, too, because he refuses to stop going to Il Giardino!

 

But the point is, Sheila could do something that Bill wouldn’t expect and thank him for having Luna sent back to jail. Sheila could commiserate with him over the fact that they both believed in her and thought that she could walk the straight and narrow. “Guess it goes to show that people don’t really change,” he might grumble.

“Some of us do,” she’d respond, leaving him to note that, come to think of it, she hasn’t shot anybody in quite a while. It would be but another step toward the show’s forced rehabilitation of Sheila. Why the powers that be are so determined to have wardrobe accessorize her outfits with a halo, we have no idea; she’s a monster, plain and simple. But they are, and since they are, this could further their confounding redemption-of-Sheila agenda