Fatima blackmails Marco Aurélio again, in Vale Tudo

In the next chapters of Vale Tudo, Maria de Fátima will put into practice a bold plan to keep her personal and romantic interests aligned, even in the face of an imminent wedding with Afonso Roitman. Revealed as the fiancée of the TCA heir, the character decides that she will not give up the company of César, her lover, and resorts to blackmail to ensure her presence in Paris.
The movement begins when Marco Aurélio loses a suitcase containing millions in dollars. With this information, Fátima pressures the executive and demands that César be transferred to the company's French branch, using the return of the money as a bargaining chip. At first, she avoids mentioning her intimate relationship with the actor, claiming only that it is a professional partnership.
At the same time, the relationship between Afonso and Solange ends definitively, after the publicist discovers her boyfriend's betrayal with Fátima. Pressured by his mother, Odete Roitman, the young man publicly admits his relationship with the villain and invites her to accompany him on his move to France, a proposal that she accepts on one condition: that she travel as his fiancée.
However, as the couple plans their new life in Europe, César begins to show distrust and fear of being left behind. In a tense moment, he confronts Fátima and threatens her: "If you do something like that, I'll get revenge, understand? I have our photos, our messages... I'll explain everything to Afonso, I'll expose them on the internet, everything."
With the situation out of control, the villain sees no alternative but to meet her lover's demands. "I need you to send another employee to Paris: César Ribeiro," she tells Marco Aurélio. The executive hesitates, but ends up giving in when he remembers that Fátima returned a million dollars to him, the result of the previous blackmail: "I'll find a way."
In this way, Marco Aurélio fulfills the agreement and organizes César's transfer to Europe. The outcome of the operation guarantees Fátima the simultaneous maintenance of both relationships, now on French territory.
terra