The Fall and Rise of Raymond Knox
Raymond Knox had once held the city in the palm of his hand. Not the tangible city—the one with its cracked sidewalks and weary tenants shivering beneath threadbare coats—but the city that glistened in the glow of headlines and the reflections of opulent ballroom mirrors. He was the very embodiment of certainty, a man of enormous stature both in presence and reality, with a glamorous trophy wife, a rapidly growing fortune, and something even more intangible yet ever-present: a name that effortlessly opened doors at the slightest mention. His voice was a mellifluous melody, his timing impeccable, and his charm was magnetic. Yet, behind the charismatic facade, there was an insatiable hunger. Beneath the civic veneer lay decay: clandestine mob connections, debts whispered in shadowed backrooms, and the one vice that invariably found a politician’s Achilles’ heel—gambling. He started with horses, moved on to cards, and eventually chased anything that promised a rush of sensation. The down...