The grand hall of the church was a sea of white roses and hushed anticipation. The organ swelled, playing the majestic opening notes of the bridal march. Hundreds of guests rose to their feet as one.
Bonnie took her father's arm. Sterling Galvan's hand was trembling slightly, but his face was a mask of paternal pride. Through the delicate lace of her veil, Bonnie's eyes were sharp, focused. She was a hunter, not a lamb to the slaughter.
At the end of the long aisle, Arlington waited. He sat in his wheelchair with a ramrod-straight posture, his presence as commanding and immovable as a king on his throne.
Sterling placed his daughter's hand into Arlington's. His touch was cool, his fingers surprisingly strong. She gave his hand a slight, deliberate squeeze-a signal.
He squeezed back, a steady, reassuring pressure that communicated a silent understanding. I'm ready.
The priest began the ceremony, his voice droning on. In the front pew, Itzel was a coiled spring of anxiety, constantly glancing at her watch and then toward a side entrance. Bonnie saw her give a sharp, almost imperceptible nod. The signal.
"Do you, Bonnie Galvan, take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband, to have and to hold, in sickness and in health..."
The entire church held its breath. Itzel's lips were already curling into a triumphant, vicious smirk. She was ready for the drama, for Bonnie's tearful rejection.
Bonnie turned her head slightly, meeting Arlington's deep, intense gaze. For a split second, the world fell away, and it was just the two of them, partners in a conspiracy.
She took a breath, and her voice rang out, clear and unwavering.
"I do."
The words hit Itzel like a physical blow. Her smile froze, then crumbled. Her eyes widened in disbelief, her carefully constructed plan shattering before her eyes.
The priest turned to the groom.
"I do," Arlington said, his voice firm, leaving no room for doubt.
Before the priest could utter another word, the massive church doors at the back of the hall were thrown open with a deafening bang.
Erwin Woods stood there, panting, his hair disheveled, his eyes wild.
"Bonnie!" he screamed.
Before the security could react decisively, fearing a public brawl, he charged down the aisle, shoving past a security guard who belatedly tried to intercept him. The air exploded with the frantic clicking of camera shutters as the press corps captured every second of the unfolding disaster.
He skidded to a halt in front of the altar, grabbing for Bonnie's arm. His voice was a pathetic, theatrical sob.
"Don't do this, Bonnie! Don't marry him! He's a cripple! We're the ones who are supposed to be together!"
A collective gasp rippled through the pews. Whispers erupted like wildfire. In the front row, Erwin's father, Howard Woods, looked like he wanted the floor to swallow him whole.
Itzel shot to her feet, a fake gasp on her lips, ready to play the part of the shocked best friend.
Bonnie stood her ground, letting Erwin's fingers dig into her wrist. She looked at his desperate, pleading face and felt nothing but cold, satisfying contempt.
Then, with a sharp, decisive motion, she yanked her arm free. She took a half-step back, positioning herself beside Arlington's wheelchair, a clear and public declaration of her choice.
She looked at her new husband, her expression a blank slate, waiting for him to make his move.
A slow, chilling smile spread across Arlington's lips. The show was on.
He raised a single, elegant hand, a silent command for the security guards to stand down. His gaze locked onto Erwin, and it was the look of a predator studying its insignificant prey.
Erwin, misinterpreting Bonnie's retreat as a sign of fear, puffed out his chest. He turned his attention to the man in the wheelchair, his expression a cocktail of arrogance and pity.
"You can't even stand up," he sneered, his voice loud enough for everyone in the front pews to hear. "How are you supposed to give her a life? You're nothing but a broken man in a chair."
The insult hung in the sacred air of the church. Bonnie's father started forward, his face red with rage, but Arlington's cold, quiet laugh stopped him.
It wasn't a laugh of amusement. It was a sound of pure, dismissive contempt.
Arlington leaned forward slightly, and the force of his personality seemed to suck the air out of the room. "A pathetic little man," he said, his voice calm and lethal. "The kind who can't accept rejection, so he tries to burn down everything he can't have."
Stung by the truth, Erwin's face contorted in a snarl. His pride shattered, he lunged, reaching for Bonnie again. "She's coming with me!"
His hand never made it.
In a movement so fast it was almost a blur, Arlington's upper body coiled and struck. His left hand shot out, a viper of flesh and bone, and clamped down on Erwin's outstretched wrist.
A sickening crack echoed in the sudden silence of the altar, sharp and brutal enough for the front pews to hear clearly.
Erwin screamed, a high-pitched shriek of agony, and his knees buckled. He crashed to the marble floor of the altar, forced into a kneeling position before Arlington's wheelchair.
A wave of shock silenced the entire church. No one had expected this. No one could have imagined the raw, brutal strength contained in the upper body of a man who couldn't use his legs.
Itzel's hand flew to her mouth, a strangled gasp escaping her lips. Her eyes were wide with a new kind of fear.
The camera flashes were relentless, a blinding strobe effect capturing Erwin's pathetic, crumpled form.
Arlington applied a fraction more pressure. Erwin sobbed, tears of pain and humiliation streaming down his face. "Please, stop, you're breaking it!"
"Touch my wife again," Arlington said, his voice a low, deadly whisper, "and I will tear this arm from your body."
Bonnie moved instinctively, stepping behind Arlington's wheelchair and placing her hands firmly on his shoulders. It was a gesture of solidarity, a public alignment.
In a voice only he could hear, she breathed, "Thank you."
Arlington released his grip. Erwin collapsed onto the floor like a puppet with its strings cut, cradling his now-swollen and purpling wrist.
Security guards swarmed the altar, hauling Erwin to his feet and dragging him, kicking and screaming, out of the church. His father, his face a mask of shame, hurried after them.
Arlington calmly adjusted the cuff of his sleeve, as if he had just swatted a fly. He turned his head slightly to look up at Bonnie, and for the first time, she saw a glimmer of something like approval in his stormy eyes.
The priest, pale and stammering, asked, "Shall... shall we continue?"
"Finish it," Arlington commanded, his tone leaving no room for argument.
During the ring exchange, Bonnie's hand was perfectly steady as she slid the heavy platinum band onto Arlington's finger. This was it. Her shield. Her weapon.
When the priest finally said, "You may now kiss the bride," Arlington didn't try to stand. He simply took her hand, turned it over, and pressed his lips to the back of it. It wasn't a kiss of passion, but of possession. A seal on their contract.
The ceremony concluded, and a wave of guests surged forward, their congratulations now laced with a palpable sense of awe and fear. Bonnie stood beside Arlington, a polite, slightly shaken smile fixed on her face, playing the part of the brave new bride.
While Arlington was occupied with a business associate, a hand gripped her arm and pulled her forcefully into the shadows of a backstage alcove.
It was Itzel. Her mask of friendship had been ripped away, revealing the ugly, contorted face of pure rage beneath.
"What the hell was that, Bonnie?" she hissed, her voice a venomous whisper. Her nails dug into Bonnie's arm. "Why did you go through with it? Why didn't you say anything?"
Bonnie didn't fight back. Instead, she let her eyes fill with tears, her body tremble. She summoned the image of Arlington crushing Erwin's wrist.
"I saw his eyes, Itzel," she whimpered, her voice cracking. "When Erwin was shouting... the way he looked. He's terrifying. I was too scared. I couldn't risk it."
She let out a sob. "I can't let my family be destroyed. The Townsends... they could crush us with a phone call."
Itzel's face tightened with disgust. "You're a coward. A pathetic, useless coward. We had a plan."
Bonnie deliberately let her hand drift up to her face, as if to wipe a tear, making sure the massive diamond on her finger caught the light. The ring, a flawless rock the size of a quail's egg, flashed brilliantly, a beacon of wealth and power.
Itzel's eyes locked onto it, her tirade faltering. The raw fire of jealousy began to smolder in her gaze.
"If I had run," Bonnie continued, her voice gaining a hint of manufactured pragmatism, "the Townsends would have sued me for breach of contract. My family would have been ruined, and I would have had nothing. At least this way..." She let her hand, and the ring, fall back to her side. "At least this way, I'm Mrs. Townsend."
The words hung in the air. The reality of Bonnie's new status, her new power, settled heavily on Itzel. She had wanted to see Bonnie ruined, cast out. Instead, Bonnie had stumbled into the one thing Itzel craved most: a place at the very top of the social ladder.
Itzel took a deep breath, forcing her features back into a semblance of concern. The transition was jarring. "Well," she sighed, "what's done is done. I just hope you'll be happy. I was only worried about you."
Bonnie put on a grateful expression, reaching out to squeeze Itzel's hand. "Thank you, Itzel. You're such a good friend."
Itzel pulled her hand away. "What about Erwin? He did all of this for you. He's probably a mess."
Bonnie shrugged, a picture of marital propriety. "I'm a married woman now. It wouldn't be right for me to contact him." She looked at Itzel, her eyes wide and innocent, her thoughts seemingly scattered. "What about Erwin? He's... oh, I can't even think about him right now. Itzel, you're his friend too, aren't you? I... I can't see him. Maybe you should go? Make sure he's okay?"
A strange, conflicted look crossed Itzel's face-a flash of guilt, quickly overshadowed by a calculating greed. Here was her chance. With Bonnie out of the picture, Erwin was vulnerable.
"Yes," Itzel said, a little too quickly. "I'll... I'll go see what I can do. You just focus on being the new lady of the manor."
She turned and walked away, her heels clicking angrily on the stone floor.
Bonnie watched her go, the smile on her face slowly melting into a smirk of pure ice. The seed was planted.
Bonnie was so focused on Itzel's retreating form that she didn't notice the faint, approaching whir until it stopped right beside her. She turned with a start. Arlington was there, his expression unreadable.
"Finished chatting?" he asked, his voice a low rumble. There was an edge to it she couldn't quite decipher. "It's time to go home."