I don't say this often, but it is very hard for me to imagine a heterosexual explanation for Lucy and Ginevra. I mean, nothing's going to actually happen, because society and Lucy refuses to even contemplate the notion that 'sometimes, people can have nice things,' but ... that is not a heterosexual dynamic.
Andrea's main plot is that she starts identifying more and more with the other household ghost, who was the possessive and domineering mother of Jim's ghost, and yes it is weird, and yes the only time she does make out with the political columnist is when the ghost is mildly possessing her, which to his credit the political columnist twigs to pretty fast and is like 'hey! nope! catch you later!' ... but at the very end she learns that sometimes you have to let people go, when they're dying of a brain aneurysm in front of you! and that's love. Or something. Anyway, her B&B is a success and I guess that's what matters.
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Andrea's main plot is that she starts identifying more and more with the other household ghost, who was the possessive and domineering mother of Jim's ghost, and yes it is weird, and yes the only time she does make out with the political columnist is when the ghost is mildly possessing her, which to his credit the political columnist twigs to pretty fast and is like 'hey! nope! catch you later!' ... but at the very end she learns that sometimes you have to let people go, when they're dying of a brain aneurysm in front of you! and that's love. Or something. Anyway, her B&B is a success and I guess that's what matters.