tom is amanda’s second husband, a native new yorker in his early thirties who fashions himself a real estate developer and often points out how he is already a millionaire. he owns a bar in the lower east side handed down to him from his father who also owned the building, near where amanda’s corpse was found. he met amanda during her last year at film school, when she asked him if she could film her final project in his bar. taken by her and intrigued by the idea of his father’s bar showing up in a film that, who knows, might end up on tv one day, he’d agree if she went out to dinner with him. they were married in a civil ceremony a little over a year later, tom becoming her patron and often funding a great portion of her projects.
however, with his financial support came a degree of paranoia and an overwhelming desire to control her. he often accused her lying when she wasn’t, even though he had never even asked her if she was involved with anyone else when they had met, let alone if she was already married. the idea just never occurred to him but he doubted her fidelity and honesty at every turn. they often fought about the subject matter of her movies, accusing her of the same sort of promiscuous behavior some of her early work depicted. he would talk while they watched classics, offering opinions that were not only uncalled for but drove amanda completely up the wall. but he could also be kind and incredibly patient with her, particularly when she felt an overwhelming anxiety that left her powerless.
while touching upon some of their early moments together, tom’s storyline will be one of him piecing together his accusations with her absences into the lives of her other husbands. he will be wrong most of the time, as he’d often been, but will never know it. for tom, there will be a mixture of regret and betrayal, an overwhelming sense that he had done more than enough for her but it wasn’t enough competing with the feeling that he could have done more to keep her, that he was guilty in not only keeping her faithful in their marriage, but also in not preventing her death. given his possessive and controlling nature, the police believe he might have had a hand in her death.