I have never understood the rationale for Barnabas's feelings. One day, Angelique is turning his crush-of-the-month into a vampire, threatening to kill his dear friend Julia, and making snide remarks about his dead sister; practically the next day Angelique is his confidante and the apple of his eye. This transition was much too sudden for me.
My rationale anyhow.
Something tells me their respective volatile natures and their past history would have caused very serious problems over time
Absolutely, Countess! After watching four years of bad blood between these two, I felt like that scene was a slap in the face to the audience and an insult to Sarah, Josette, Jeremiah, Naomi, Roxanne, Vicki, Elizabeth, Dr. Lang, Ben Stokes, and everyone else who suffered either directly or indirectly from Angelique's evil.
isn't the idea of a barnabas/angelique love affair one of the oldest storytelling cliche's in the book?:to have long standing rivals/enemies suddenly profess thier love for one another
I know that for many fans, the Barnabas/Josette romance is the heart of DS, but cynic that I am, I never quite bought into it. I always felt that Barnabas loved the idea of Josette more than he loved the actual woman. For me, the real tragedy of the Barnabas/Josette/Angelique triangle is that he was so in love with that image that he failed to recognize that he had the love of a real woman.
Wow, cousins, you really surprised me! I thought I was going to get crucified for this topic. . Lots of interesting points expressed though. ... Great feedback on this topic, cousins. Thanks!
I still suspect that the 'redemption' of Angelique was a plot device to prepare the audience for the Bramwell/Catherine story. Otherwise, what a shock to the system that would have been. Even so, the storyline, IMHO, bombed.