
"That morning, Aggie drives over to where Teddy's car was found. The police found a suicide note in his car, but Mrs. Fenig is not convinced that he was suicidal. She tells the officers on the scene that Teddy had traveling plans with his girlfriend and seemed to be in high spirits."
"He's still at the top of his professional field, insanely rich, and married to a hottie (who, as it turns out, was his late wife's executive assistant and close friend ... yikes). The only reason he has to care is that his bad rep is bad for business. In this age of self-branding, he can't use his name without raising eyebrows."
Nile Jarvis remains professionally dominant, wealthy, and newly married to his late wife's former assistant, yet his murder accusation damages his personal brand and business prospects. Jarvis Yards faces protests from environmentally concerned New Yorkers and Councilwoman Olivia Benitez, complicating his public standing. Aggie learns details about Nile and the protests during a visit to Central Park to meet Abbott. Aggie visits the site where Teddy's car was found and discovers police recovered a suicide note, but Mrs. Fenig doubts suicide, accuses Aggie of wanting this outcome, and challenges Aggie's grief and culpability.
Read at Vulture
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]