03-11-2017, 05:24 PM
(03-11-2017, 04:15 PM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote:I was only referring to Renard pointing out the obvious to Adalind as a way to compromise her loyalty to Nick, not break them up so he could have her. But every point you made about Renard could be followed by “Nick too”. Diana is only at the loft because Adalind refused to leave her with Renard. Nick can’t have much respect for Adalind if he’s lying to her. Nick has never had a date with Adalind. Their weekend trip was about Monroe’s birthday, it wasn’t a romantic getaway.(03-11-2017, 03:47 PM)Robyn Wrote: Even if Adalind is being portrayed as gullible and desperate, Renard would have used Adalind's house of cards with Nick to manipulate and confuse her in order to break her loyalty to Nick.
Sean only wanted Diana back after BC convinced him of it. Sean has always had, during the show, a very low opinion of Adalind so he did not think she was worth any work. Sean was even less interested in Kelly than Nick was in Diana. My view is both men are not good fathers to the other man's child with Adalind. Sean has never gone a date with Adalind during the show.
Quote:Sean's "house of cards" is in even worse shape than Nick's.But at the time he wouldn’t have expected it to be. And, Adalind doesn’t believe Renard is the best thing since sliced bread.
Quote:Nick's relationship with Diana is still early days. To her, he's guy her mommy lives with, and nothing more. His primary goal at this point is to not inject himself into parenting matters between Adalind and Sean and, above all, not to try to compete with Sean. The time for Nick to try to be a "good father" to Diana is when Diana lets him know that she wants or needs him to.I’ll reserve judgment until after the episode that Nick attempts to save Diana. Because so far I haven’t seen any compelling evidence.
"If my devils are to leave me, I am afraid my angels will take flight as well." Rainer Maria Rilke