Storms that develop within a zone of strong, deep, linear forcing can experience rapid upscale growth into lines regardless of the orientation of the cloud-layer wind and shear vectors. Very rapid upscale linear growth is often observed within the zone of enhanced convergence and mesoscale ascent resulting from a cold front merging with a dryline. A small boundary-relative normal component of the mean cloud-layer wind can promote storms remaining within the zone of linear forcing, which can accelerate upscale linear growth. Conversely, a large boundary-relative normal component of the mean cloud-layer wind directed toward the unstable warm sector can promote storms moving away from the initiation zone shortly after they develop. This scenario would tend to favor persistent discrete modes, but storm evolution would likely also depend on the nature and strength of the convective outflows and the capping inversion in the warm sector.