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Fatal Affair (Fatal, #1)
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Fatal Affair > Question K

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Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9278 comments Mod
John had a son, Thomas, when he was 16-years old with Patricia Donaldson and was forced by his father to keep him secret and was denied a formal relationship with Patricia. Graham and Laine never saw the boy after the day he was born, never owning him. Your thoughts about it all, including how a prominent politician could keep such a secret for all these years? Did you think this situation was connected to John’s murder?


message 2: by Anita (last edited Oct 17, 2023 04:40PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Anita (anitanodiva) | 2953 comments Very sad for two characters I had a lot of sympathy for. It just messed up everyone involved big time. But by the time John was an adult and able to make his own decisions, he had moved on and become a different person. I thought of all the suspects, Patricia had the best motive to murder John.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9278 comments Mod
I could see how John capitulated as a teen but once he was elected Senator, it was time for him to step forward and acknowledge his family. I couldn’t help but believe his murder was connected to this secret but I was looking more at the son than Patricia, especially after Freddie interviewed her.

I really couldn’t accept why neither Graham or Laine reached out to their grandson for 20 years! That stunned me.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 1808 comments There was no excuse for any of the O'Connors' behavior. Like Jonetta, I find it hard to believe that John continued to hide the woman he supposedly loved and his son for such a length of time.

John was clearly enjoying his carefree bachelor existence too much to acknowledge Patricia and Thomas. He never had any intention of revealing the truth.

That said, this does not excuse Thomas's vicious attacks on him and the innocent women in John's life.


Anita (anitanodiva) | 2953 comments The O'Connors were so good to Nick, basically treating him like a son, but couldn't acknowledge their own grandson. Something is seriously wrong with them.


Charlene (charlenethestickler) | 1203 comments Yes --- quite dysfunctional. I'm sure they are not the only grandparents not to acknowledge a grandchild,.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9278 comments Mod
Yeah, I saw that in my own family. I’m still upset about it.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 1808 comments Anita wrote: "The O'Connors were so good to Nick, basically treating him like a son, but couldn't acknowledge their own grandson. Something is seriously wrong with them."

Obsession with social and political standing. They don't treat their other son any better and the daughter and son-in-law keep their financial situation to themselves. Supportive families would be there for them.


Robin (robinmy) | 2450 comments I really did not like the O'Connors for the way they treated Patricia and Thomas. It's ridiculous the way they hid their grandson away. And John was just as bad. You can forgive him when he was a teenager and doing what his father told him. But afterward, he could have joined them in Chicago. Instead he kept them hidden from the public.

Lauren, I like how you pointed out the way O'Connors other children are treated by their parents. The Senator tried to groom Terry as next in line until Terry got a DUI. Then he was kicked to the curb.


Anita (anitanodiva) | 2953 comments They figured they could hid a teen pregnancy, but not a DUI.


Sharon Kallenberger Marzola | 3474 comments I agree with all of you. I'm not a fan of the O'Connors at all. I don't think John and Patricia would have stayed married all these years, but they should have a chance.

It wouldn't be that big a deal for a politician to have a child as a teen these days. It would be good to show a man who supports his child and is a good father. There will always be a religious fanatic who will strike out, but most of his constituents will not think twice about it.

It is a little strange that the O'Connors accepted Nick as a son but not their biological grandson.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 1808 comments Sharon wrote: "It is a little strange that the O'Connors accepted Nick as a son but not their biological grandson."

Nick was acceptable to them.
If I were being cynical, one could argue that "adopting" Nick, a poor scholarship kid with a lot of potential, looks good on a political resume.


Sharon Kallenberger Marzola | 3474 comments Good point!


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9278 comments Mod
It may be cynical but probably on the nose.


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