Tom Buchanan leads George Wilson straight to Gatsby's house.
George finds out that Gatsby's car hit Myrtle because Tom reveals it during an argument with George. Tom tells George that the car belongs to Gatsby, not him.
George Wilson believes that Myrtle was killed by a wealthy man driving a yellow car, as he found a dog leash with a yellow car that matches the description of Tom Buchanan's car in her possession. He is convinced that this man is Myrtle's lover.
Myrtyle was the lover of Tom Buchanan. George Wilson was her lifeless husband. Myrtle is killed by the car that Daisy was driving. George shoots Jay Gatsby at the end of the novel and commits suicide.
George and Myrtle Wilson live in the Valley of Ashes in the novel The Great Gatsby. George owns/works a car garage, but business has been extremely slow for him. Mr. Wilson is attempting to buy a car off Tom, but in the entire course of the novel the car is never sold to George. Myrtle is George's wife and is having an affair with Tom. She is not attractive like Daisy is, but she is said to carry herself in a sensual way. To friends of Myrtle's it is obvious that she does not love her husband, George however seems very devoted to his wife.
George Wilson found out who owned the car by asking Tom Buchanan, as Tom's mistress, Myrtle Wilson, had been driving it. Tom told George that the car belonged to Gatsby, sparking a chain of events leading to the tragic ending of the novel "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Tom and George both learn about Myrtle's affair with Tom. Tom discovers this when George shows him the dog leash with Myrtle's initials on it. George also learns about the affair when he sees Tom's car passing by with Myrtle inside, leading him to mistakenly believe that Gatsby was the driver.
Tom tells George Wilson that the yellow car involved in the hit-and-run accident was driven by Gatsby, which leads George to believe that Gatsby is responsible for killing Myrtle Wilson. This ultimately leads to George shooting Gatsby before turning the gun on himself.
Myrtle Wilson was killed by Jay Gatsby's car, driven by Daisy Buchanan, but it was George Wilson who pulled the trigger, believing Gatsby to be the driver. This event occurs in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, "The Great Gatsby."
George Wilson believes that Jay Gatsby killed his wife, Myrtle Wilson, because he recognized Gatsby's car at the scene of the accident and because Tom Buchanan revealed Gatsby and Myrtle were having an affair.
Gatsby's car accidentally hits and kills Myrtle Wilson, Tom Buchanan's mistress, near Daisy's house. Tom leads George Wilson, Myrtle's husband, to believe it was Gatsby who was driving the car that killed Myrtle, ultimately leading to tragic consequences.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby," Jay Gatsby was shot by George Wilson, who mistakenly believed that Gatsby was driving the car that killed his wife Myrtle. Gatsby was shot while he was lounging in his swimming pool.
In the Great Gatsby, Myrtle gives different excuses to leave, to see Tom. On the day Nick is out with Tom, they meet Myrtle in New York, and she tells them, that she had told George, that she was going to visit her sister. Tom always uses his car, to visit Myrtle, by telling George, that he would one day sell his car to him.
Myrtle runs out into the street in "The Great Gatsby" because she sees the car approaching, driven by Daisy Buchanan. Myrtle believes the car is Tom Buchanan, her lover, and she is eager to attract his attention. However, her actions result in a tragic accident that leads to her death.