Why is my story demanding a romance arc between these characters?

Link the Writer

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...What do you do when the muse is telling you that these two characters *need* to have a romance arc, and *need* to have a gentle, sudden kiss and maybe even an implied sex scene?'Cause in my Colonial historical fiction, these two characters in question are Robin Parrish (son of a doctor) and Emily Maywalker (daughter of a secretly Loyalist consultant) and they're in their late teens/early-20s. Like... Yeah, they're friends but... All I can justify for now is that Emily is being pressured to move to London by her father*, she doesn't want to go. Doesn't want to leave her friends behind, especially not Robin and Amos (well, Amos is the fourteen year old tavern boy that she basically feels protective of.) She has this one rebellious moment where she's all, 'Please, let's just forget the situation, forget ourselves. It's just you and me. Tonight.' It's quite out of character, even Robin is stunned hearing this.Like, my muse *wants* this but I'm like... 'Why?'



  • This is Colonial times, circa 1775, so... even if Robin and Emily are of the same social class, I'm pretty sure Emily is about to cause the mother of all scandals if she and Robin go that far. 'Cause they're not married.


  • * My idea was that her father is wanting to betroth her to the son of a London banker, take her to London and help secure a footing in Britain regardless of who wins the war. Emily, of course, doesn't want that. Not only does she have friends in the town, but she's been helping her father (and Amos, the man's informant) with the case and she feels going to London will mean she's abandoning everything, especially Amos and Robin.


  • 'Cause my muse keeps expanding it with:- Robin does have feelings for Emily, maybe romantic, maybe not. He's exploring that.- Emily is being betrothed/being forced to go with this son of a London banker whom her father wants to help secure a business footing in Britain.- At some point, this son says something smarmy about Amos and Emily, implying her feelings for Amos is... intimate, shall we say. Robin hears this and punches his lights out. Robin is then quickly sent to Cambridge until the heat dies down (or he has a duel with the guy and nearly gets his leg blown off.)- This basically helps to isolate Amos, who by this point, is on thin ice with the tavern owner, and the boy feels like he can fall back on people. Emily is trying to help him.The arcs? Well, Robin learns to monitor his emotions and restrain himself. Emily eventually learns to stand up for herself and fight for what she believes.


The implied sex scene? Dunno why my muse wants that, that's likely never gonna happen, but everything above? Yeah, my muse wants it. Reckon I should listen to it. Maybe that's the story it's trying to tell and I should stop fighting it?
 
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You do one of two things. You either put the romance arc in, or you don't.

The story isn't trying to tell you anything. You are telling yourself, and you have the final decision. Story ain't gonna write itself.
 
Sometimes the "will they/wont they" is all you need. A little mystery to leave the readers fantasizing.

Its like that in Cozy Mysteries. Often the lead female and her sidekick have a flirtationship going on. Its clear they are interested in some way shape or form. But its not written on the page.

Longer series, they eventually confess or make it official. But the first few books, there is no romance or unprofessional relationship between the 2 characters.
 
What city/town are they in? Do they have different opinions on the troubles between England the colonies? Can this lead to a passionate disagreement? Can you put them in a position of danger that throws them into one another's arms?
 
They're in a fictional town just an hour's carriage ride from Boston. Emily's family is secretly Loyalist while Robin's is neutral/partially siding with the Patriots. I should probably develop this angle a bit more now that I think about it.
 
They're in a fictional town just an hour's carriage ride from Boston. Emily's family is secretly Loyalist while Robin's is neutral/partially siding with the Patriots. I should probably develop this angle a bit more now that I think about it.

One source of conflict between them might be if Robin starts to express interest in joining the local Committee of Safety:

In the American Revolution, committees of correspondence, committees of inspection, also known as committees of observation and committees of safety, were different local committees of Patriots that became a shadow government; they took control of the Thirteen Colonies away from royal officials, who became increasingly helpless.

By 1775, the committees had become counter-governments that gradually replaced royal authority and took control of local governments.
 
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