In chapter five, it starts out with Gatsby worrying about making everything perfect for when Daisy comes and visits Nick. He gets the grass cut, decorates the whole house with dozens of flowers, and he orders in the best tea he can find and little cakes to come with it this is all in attempt to try and impress Daisy. He makes it very clear that the last thing he wants is to inconvenience Nick and repeatedly asks him what he prefers and what is best for him. Gatsby is usually a very calm and collected person, but clearly he is very nervous about this whole thing, which indicates that he is still in love with her. When Daisy got there Gatsby was so nervous he ran out of the room, but quickly got up the courage to go back and see her. It is evident that Gatsby and Daisy still love each other by the way they interact with each other. Finally Nick found a way to try and give them alone time to try and get over the awkwardness of the situation, when Nick returned it was like the room was transformed completely and they were happy to see each other, “They were sitting at either end if the couch, looking at each other as if some question had been asked, or was in the air, and every vestige of embarrassment was gone… but there was a change in Gatsby that was simply confounding. He literally glowed; without a word or a gesture of exultation a new well-being radiated from him and filled the little room” (page 89). Gatsby then bring Daisy to his house to give her a tour of his impressive mansion in hopes of winning her back because she chose money and materialistic things over love. He watched Daisy closely and even he seemed to be changing as he saw her awe when she looked from room to room. Daisy is the only one who knows Gatsby’s true past, she knows that he does not come from a wealthy family and Gatsby almost forgot about the lies he told Nick because he was so preoccupied with Daisy, “It took me three years to earn the money that bought it. I thought you inherited the money, I did, old sport, he said automatically, but I lost most of it in the big panic” (page 90). The chapter concludes with Nick leaving them alone in his mansion where sexual actions could have occurred, however, it is inconclusive.