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Abstract Romantic subplots and central love stories remain the most enduring engines of narrative across media. However, weak romantic storylines often suffer from "insta-love," contrived conflict, or a lack of agency. This paper deconstructs the mechanics of developing believable, compelling relationships on the page. Drawing from narrative psychology, screenwriting theory, and genre conventions, it provides a framework for constructing romantic arcs that serve both character development and plot progression. 1. Introduction: Why Romance is Never Just a Subplot In the hierarchy of narrative elements, romance is frequently relegated to "B-plot" status. This is a critical error. A well-developed romantic storyline functions as a crucible for character revelation. It exposes protagonists' fears, values, and capacity for change. Whether the genre is literary fiction, epic fantasy, or psychological thriller, the introduction of intimacy forces characters to lower their masks.