A lot of fans keep saying the same thing about Lulu and “Nathan”: something feels off. On paper, the show is giving them scenes that should work. There is proximity, there is emotional setup, there is obvious romantic framing, and yet the connection still feels flat to many viewers. The spark is missing. The warmth feels forced. The rhythm between them does not land like a genuine slow-burn romance. Normally, that kind of reaction would be dismissed as a pairing that simply failed to click. But in a soap, when the audience keeps sensing that a relationship feels wrong, that discomfort can become a clue. And in this case, it may be one of the biggest clues GH has planted.
What makes this idea so interesting is that the lack of chemistry may not be accidental at all. It may be the point. If “Nathan” is not pursuing Lulu out of real emotion, then of course the romance would feel hollow. Of course the scenes would feel slightly cold, slightly mechanical, slightly disconnected. One person would be responding to what looks like affection, while the other would be performing a role. That would instantly explain why so many fans cannot emotionally buy into this pairing. They are not necessarily reacting to bad writing. They may be reacting to a romance that is intentionally built on false feelings.
That theory gets much darker when you look at who comes with Lulu. She is not just a woman “Nathan” can flirt with. She is a direct path into a much larger web of family connections, vulnerabilities, and secrets. Getting close to Lulu could mean getting close to Charlotte. It could mean access to Rocco. It could mean another angle on Valentin. In other words, Lulu is not just a romantic option. She is an entry point. If “Nathan” is part of a bigger agenda, then pursuing Lulu would make perfect strategic sense. It would allow him to position himself close to the people he may really be targeting without looking suspicious too early.
That is exactly why the Charlotte and Rocco angle makes this theory so unsettling. The moment children enter the picture, this stops feeling like an awkward romance and starts looking like a calculated infiltration. If “Nathan” is using Lulu to stay near her family, then every soft scene becomes more sinister in hindsight. Every attempt to build trust becomes less about intimacy and more about access. Every emotional beat becomes a possible move in a larger game. That kind of story would completely reframe what fans have been watching. The emptiness people feel in the pairing would no longer be a flaw. It would be evidence that the relationship was never the real story.
There is also a strong argument that Lulu may not even be the true end goal. Britt may be. If Britt knows more than she is saying about Faison, about Nathan, or about the mystery surrounding that supposed fourth child, then controlling the space around her becomes crucial. Going directly at Britt might trigger resistance. But embedding himself near Lulu, the children, and the surrounding family network could give “Nathan” a quieter form of power. It would let him influence the board without immediately exposing his hand. In that version of the story, Lulu is not the great love interest. She is the bridge. She is the socially acceptable cover that gives him a foothold exactly where he needs one.

This is where the “no chemistry” criticism becomes much more valuable than it first appears. Soap writers often plant clues through tone before they confirm anything through plot. A look that lasts too long, a silence that feels wrong, a kiss that lands cold, a romantic setup that never quite becomes romantic in the audience’s gut. Those things matter. Fans keep saying Lulu and “Nathan” do not feel believable together, and maybe that instinct deserves more respect. What if the audience has already picked up on the truth before the script is ready to say it out loud? What if the failed emotional connection is the breadcrumb?
That reading gets even stronger once you factor in the other red flags surrounding “Nathan.” Fans have repeatedly pointed to his strange energy when Cullum appears, the weird look on his face afterward, and the overall ominous feeling he brings into scenes that should feel tender. Then there is the baseball clue, which many viewers refuse to let go of. If Nathan was known for something and this version suddenly feels off in a very specific, observable way, that is not just random character drift. That is the kind of detail soaps use when they want viewers to suspect that the man on screen is not the man everyone thinks he is. Once those clues are added together, the chemistry issue starts to feel less like a fan complaint and more like part of a pattern.
If this theory is right, then Lulu is not stepping into a controversial new love story. She is stepping into a trap. That is what makes this angle so much darker and so much stronger than a simple “they do not work together” argument. The real twist may be that GH never wanted this couple to feel epic, sweeping, or deeply romantic. The show may have wanted them to feel wrong. Because if “Nathan” is using Lulu as cover to reach Charlotte, Rocco, Valentin, or even Britt, then the emotional emptiness was never a mistake. It was the warning sign. Fans thought they were criticizing a couple with no chemistry. But they may have actually identified the biggest clue of all: this was never love, and Lulu may be the next victim of a plan far more dangerous than anyone realizes.