The Advisor
It was the shoes that first told the story. Keon Brathwaite, a man who now advised CEOs and political hopefuls, still wore the same brand of sensible, cushioned oxfords he’d bought as a first-year paralegal two decades earlier. “Comfort for the long haul,” he’d say with a wry smile when a sharp-eyed journalist finally noticed. It was the only part of his uniform that hadn’t been upgraded by a Savile Row tailor. The rest was the aura of quiet authority, the bespoke suits, and the reputation as the man who could see around corners. It was a testament to a different kind of education. Keon never became a lawyer. While his law-school-bound peers were buried in Socratic theory, Keon was in the trenches of a prestigious Manhattan firm, sorting through the catastrophic discovery process of a billion-dollar merger. He saw what they didn’t: the panic in a partner’s eyes when a key memo went missing, the tremor in a billionaire client’s voice when the SEC letter arrived, the way a perfectly...