At the beginning of this chapter, Tom, Daisy, Gatsby, Jordan, and Nick all decide to meet with one another and get-together on a hot summer day. The affair between Gatsby and Daisy is one that has become obvious to many, including Tom. One day, the five find themselves in Tom and Daisy's home. This day a special because it was supposed to mark when Daisy was to tell Tom that she loves Gatsby and that she is leaving him. The five of them decide to go to town and do something on this hot day, so Gatsby and Daisy took Tom's car and Tom drove Nick and Jordan in Gatsby's car. Along the way, Tom has to stop to get gas at Mr Wilson's. However Mr Wilson informs Tom that they are moving West because he started seeing something with his wife. His wife, Myrtle is Tom's mistress. Tom immediately felt panic in that he was losing both his wife and his mistress at the same time. What sets this chapter away from other is that Tom and Gatsby face one another face-to-face. Tom rashes out that Daisy only truly loved him, while Gatsby argues that she loved him the entire time just because she couldn't have him, for he wasn't rich enough and was off at war. In this disaggrement, Daisy true nature comes out in addition to the crazed men's behavior. She comes off as being confused and in the middle. She doesn't want to say anything to harm the other, thus she hesitates when answering question on who she loved and when. After Daisy convinces everyone to leave town and go back home, emotions are all over the place, thoughts are confused, and patience levels are through the roof. Gatsby decided to let Daisy drive home to relieve her nerves; however, on the ride home she hits and kills Myrtle immediately. Gatsby and Daisy don't pull the car over, but instead hope that nobody had seen the accident. A few minutes later, people crowed the street and Tom decided to pull over to see what was happening. Upon seeing his mistress dead, he feels crushed. Mr Wilson knows it was the yellow car he was driving earlier that hit her, so he immediately started rashing out on him. He then explained that it wasn't his car. When Nick finally arrived home, he came home to see Gatsby waiting. Gatsby spoke about the accident, and how Daisy was actually driving, but he would take the blame for killing Myrtle. He also voiced tha the was going to stay up until Daisy went to bed. This drive and motivation inside of Gatsby seems as though it cannot be broken. No matter what Daisy says, Gatsby is going to believe that they are meant together whether that be his true emotions or acceptance of a dream he waited on for five years.