
From the moment those spoilers dropped for the week of March 23โ27, it felt like the show was practically shouting at us: Marco is doomed.
And now, looking back at that seemingly harmless scene with Alexis giving him instructions about handwritten notes, itโs impossible not to see it for what it really wasโa setup. A chilling, deliberate setup.
This show doesnโt do coincidences, and that detail feels far too specific to be meaningless. If anything, it might end up being the key to everything.
And poor Alexisโhow much more can this woman take? Just when sheโs trying to live a normal life, sheโs about to walk straight into another nightmare.
The image of her discovering Marcoโs body in her own office is already haunting. You can practically feel the shock, the horror, the emotional collapse thatโs coming. Itโs the kind of moment that will ripple far beyond just one storyline.
But letโs talk about Marco for a second. Because as frustrating as his choices were, his intentions werenโt evil. He was trying to help, trying to do something good for someone he cared about. But in true soap fashion, good intentions donโt save youโthey get you killed.
Marco underestimated the danger he was in, and more importantly, he underestimated Ross Cullum. That was his fatal mistake.
Cullum isnโt just dangerousโheโs calculated, cold, and always ten steps ahead. The image of him creeping into that office with a knife feels like something straight out of a horror movie.
And if the spoilers are right, what happens next wonโt be subtle or off-screen. Itโs going to be brutal. Fast. Final.
But hereโs where things get interesting. That pen. Those handwritten notes. What if Marco, in his final moments, manages to leave something behind?

A letter, a symbol, even just a single bloody initial. Itโs such a classic soap twist, and yet it would be so effective. A dying clue that could unravel everythingโif someone finds it in time.
Because Cullum isnโt just planning a murderโheโs planning a cover-up. And who better to frame than Sonny? Itโs almost too predictable, and yet thatโs exactly why it works.
With Sidwell grieving and desperate for someone to blame, it wonโt take much to point the finger in the wrong direction. Suddenly, one death turns into a full-scale war.
And then thereโs Jocelyn. Caught in the middle of it all, forced to confront a truth she never expected: Sonny might actually be innocent. That realization alone could change everything. The question is, will she act on it? Or will her hatred blind her to whatโs really at stake?
Because make no mistakeโCullum is the real threat here. And if he gets away with this, Marco wonโt be the last victim.
Itโs messy. Itโs violent. Itโs emotionally exhausting. And somehow, itโs exactly why we keep watching.