This will be especially a difficult thing to portray. So you have a person (Christina/Neville, in all 4 variants) who is shy and needs to be pursued so the PC gets to romance them. Which can - if done just a little bit wrong - make the whole thing like the PC is pressuring the poor shy people into something. (Yes, they will say they want it at the end - but how many people say this just to please, without really meaning it.) And this is regardless of any gender-combination, just to make that clear.FenCayne wrote:Anyways, when I came to write the script, they emerged as grounded, rather serious, down-to-earth characters who (because opposites attract, right?) had somehow forged firm friendships with the Trevelyans which had survived numerous long-duration and long-distance separations. As reserved, shy people – even, in Neville's case, a kind of high-functioning autistic – they were never going to make the first move romance-wise. Not heterosexual, not homosexual. No way. No how. Not ever in a million years. They value Ann and Arthur's friendship too much to take the risk of spoiling it by coming out with their feelings and risking rejection which would taint what friendship might remain.
Ah well, maybe it's just me, and the more open chars are going to be more of my type...