kate and edwina brigerton

Bridgerton Season 2 demonstrates how non-conventional its central love triangle is by emphasizing Kate and Edwina Sharma’s complex sisterhood. From the sisters’ introduction, the series never pretends it’s telling a pristine tale where people are immune to mistakes and growing pains — no matter their age. Admittedly, Bridgerton takes creative liberties that diverge from the source material, leading this season to be more inspired by the book than adapted from the book. Still, this season never loses sight of Edwina and Kate, and that is true to the book. It even sets up bright futures for both of them.

Bridgerton debuted on Netflix in 2019. The romance series takes a page or two from Julia Quinn’s novels, which chronicle the love stories of the Bridgerton siblings. The first season follows Daphne Bridgerton’s romance with Simon Basset, the Duke of Hastings, like in Quinn’s The Duke & I. Season 2 sees Anthony eventually accept a love match after an epic enemies-to-lovers romance with Kate Sharma, similar to Quinn’s The Viscount Who Loved Me. The major hitch in Anthony and Kate’s love story is that Anthony starts both the book and the season by courting Edwina Sharma to avoid a love match.

Before Anthony comes into the picture with Edwina and Kate, “Capital R Rake” hones in on the sisters’ dynamic. Kate already harbors many secrets, as a means to fiercely protect her younger sister. Edwina, on the other hand, notices even the smaller things about her older sister, like quiet beats of Kate holding a pretty dress up to herself when she thinks no one else is in the room. Charithra Chandran and Simone Ashley have excellent chemistry that lends to their characters’ deep connection. Those early scenes and the actresses’ talent create the foundation for another epic love story in its own right.

Bridgerton follows Edwina and Kate’s sisterhood with the kind of nuance it deserves as such a fundamental relationship to both women. Anthony’s introduction to such a dynamic understandably complicates things. His presence rocks its foundation because he throws a wrench in Kate’s plan to find a love match for her sister and avoid one for herself. Plus, he unknowingly unearths the secrets Kate should have never kept from Edwina in the first place. Superficially, those elements could align in a conventional love triangle, but they don’t. Instead, they boil down to the importance of choosing love and an honest, trusting sisterhood.

Bridgerton - Kate and Edwina Dancing Together At Ball

In Kate’s noble attempt to shoulder all of her family’s duty, she unfairly deflects both expectations and her own wishes onto her sister. Bridgerton Season 2 never demonizes Kate for assuming a role with such side effects but holds her accountable, as it does with Anthony. The season also chooses the same empathetic and sympathetic route with Edwina, too. Until the end of the season, Edwina follows every rule (including Pall Mall ones) to be as perfect as she needs to be to become the Viscountess. Edwina’s insistence on being perfect makes her breakthrough with Kate in “The Choice” compelling and emotional.

Kate’s inability to tell Edwina the truth about anything or everything is complicated. For drama’s sake, of course, Bridgerton delays the inevitable. From Kate’s perspective, her desire to preserve Edwina’s happiness for as long as she can is understandable. It becomes misguided and some level of selfish, but its messiness is attuned to its humanness. Similarly, it’s so cutting to hear Edwina call Kate her “half-sister;” it almost feels unforgivable. But, sometimes good people do and say terrible things when they’re hurt; it’s only human. After all, the people who know each other the best can hurt each other the most.

Ultimately, those same people can pick up each other’s pieces and put them back together. So, Edwina and Kate find stability again by the end of the season. It comes after many warranted cold shoulders and a near-death experience (that creates convenient timing for tensions to die down), but Edwina and Kate’s foundation is stronger than ever by “The Viscount Who Loved Me.” As they dance on their own, the sisters embrace their imperfections as individuals together and open up doors to new chapters. Edwina and Kate’s dynamic comes full circle almost simultaneously with that of Anthony and Kate, proving how integral it was to the story.