Millionaire’s White Snake Exposes a Family’s Hidden Financial Empire-olive

The night I caught Grant Whitmore in bed with Madison Vale, the first thing I noticed was not the champagne sweating on the nightstand.

It was not the silk dress puddled on the bedroom floor.

It was not the red lipstick smeared along his jaw like a signature somebody had been proud enough to leave.

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It was the snake.

A small white snake lifted its pale head inside a dusty glass terrarium on the penthouse balcony and looked straight through the grime at me.

November rain ticked against the windows of Grant’s Seattle penthouse, steady and cold, while the room smelled like stale champagne, expensive perfume, and betrayal warming under recessed lights.

The snake did not look at Grant.

It did not look at Madison Vale lying in my bedsheets.

It looked at me.

For three years, I had been Grant Whitmore’s almost fiancée, a phrase that sounded romantic only if you ignored the unpaid labor hidden underneath it.

I knew his coffee order.

I knew his mother Eleanor’s medication schedule.

I knew which Whitmore Holdings board members drank bourbon, which ones needed flattery before they signed anything, and which charity wives kissed both cheeks while measuring where to place the knife.

I had a key card to his penthouse, a drawer in his bathroom, and a calendar full of his obligations.

What I did not have was a ring.

Or a contract.

Or the dignity of being named clearly in rooms where his equals gathered.

Grant liked me useful, loyal, polished, and unofficial.

That morning, I had picked up his dry cleaning because his assistant had called in sick.

That afternoon, I had collected the 9:00 a.m. investor deck he said he had forgotten in the office.

At 11:38 p.m., still damp from driving across Seattle in the rain, I used the key card he had given me and stepped into his penthouse with the presentation folder tucked beneath my arm.

Madison Vale was the newly appointed marketing director at Whitmore Holdings.

She had the kind of polished blond beauty that looked expensive even barefoot.

She pulled the sheet higher over her chest when she saw me, but her smile barely moved.

Grant sat up.

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