Relationship Info
Rose & Ian
Rose doesn't care for Ian at all. She thinks that it's absolutely absurd that he gets the same prefect privileges as her, though he doesn't do any of the work. Rose has heard about Ian from her friends and doesn't much like what she's heard.
Everything that Rose
thinks she knows about him is tested as the story progresses, and she doesn't know what to think of him anymore. The more she learns about him and the closer they get, the more she likes him, especially when she gets to see the more serious side of him and realizes how smart she is. Due to his reputation around Hogwarts, Rose has no idea what to think of him, and the last thing she wants is to just be another girl he is trying to get close to.
James & Amelia
Amelia has hated everything that asshole James Potter stands for during her whole Hogwarts career – trouble and danger. James believes Amelia to be a grumpy Slytherin who has nothing better to do than make his life dull and boring. James, however, stumbles upon Amelia’s true self during an unlikely event and everything they thought they knew changed.
Their constant squabbling grows both stronger and weaker during the story
but the arrival of the tournament throws everything out the window as the pair have been entered. (I was thinking that James enters Amelia as a joke to piss her off?) Things pick up quickly and they soon discover that they have more in common than they thought.
Scorpius & Drucilla
From the moment they first became students at Hogwarts, they've been in the same House and the same group of friends which resulted in them becoming a couple when they were in third year. They broke up at the end of the same year and got back together in the middle of fourth year and have been together since. Both his and her parents are pleased with the two being together, thus making them stay together. However, with both participating in the tournament, it's sure to arise some problems through competitiveness as well as allowing them both to really see their relationship and whether they're together because they want to be or because their parents want them to be.