lol. Coughs... awkward silence.
Anyway - I guess that's enough about the triangle scene. Because we can debate it until the sun comes up again, but in the end until we find out where GSR stands in relation to that scene we'll never really know the truth of what was going on.
I do wish the writers would just get on with it. What really bothers me is this: if the Gum Drops scene HAD aired, would that mean that they would be amping up the GSR hinting, or have the rest of the scripts that were already written gone untouched? In which case, would certain GSR scenes since (aka pretty much just a bullet runs through it) make more sense in context?
And then there's the soon-to-come 'Sara stays cool while the blonde one gets pissed' scene.
To be honest, I don't mind a little bit of angsty girl-fighting. Sara's waited six years and she's not about to let someone else grab him now that he's back on track with life/work, etc.
I just don't want it to get Jerry, and they are skirting the Jerry line if they do one too many "oh no you didn't" scenes. (ex: The Blonde One saying that Sara has no friends outside the lab)
But before I change my mind for the umpteenth time, here is my guess as to where Sara and Grissom stand:
The Nick thing changed everyone, so Grissom is learning that he cares more for his team than he thought he did, between Nick's capture and the team breaking up, etc. Sara almost lost a friend, and realizes how much she's cut off from other people. So I don't think (because the GD scene did NOT air) that they are 'sleeping together', but I do think that this new perspective they both have (coupled with the fact that Grissom's hearing and Sara's abuse problems is no longer on the table) has caused them to go back to the flirty almost-there ways of the first season. So I suppose what I'm trying to say is that it's possible they have begun something, but that it's not a fully-fledged relationship, maybe just a flirting tango thing that's escalated a little bit (perhaps to an after-shift meal thing) because while Sara's reaction (and some of her comments, like in bite me) has that spidey-sense of someone who is fixed on someone else, but yet not confident enough to place a label on it, which causes unease.