“Margaret has left you her entire estate,” Richard continued, his professional composure barely containing what I sensed was his own amazement. “The inheritance totals one hundred million dollars.”The number seemed to hang in the air like a physical presence, too large and significant to be processed immediately. I gripped the bannister of my restored staircase—the same bannister I had sanded and refinished with my own hands during countless weekends of restoration work.
My first thought was Daniel. I pictured telling him over coffee in our cramped kitchen, explaining that we could finally afford the renovations we had discussed, that financial stress could become a thing of the past, that we could support his sister through graduate school without the burden of student loans weighing on our decisions.But there was another conversation I needed to have first, one that had been building for months.
Chapter 2: The Truth About My Success
For the past two years, I had deliberately downplayed the scope of my business achievements to Daniel. What had started as Whitaker Consulting—a small marketing firm I launched from our spare bedroom—had evolved into Whitaker Strategic Solutions, a comprehensive business consultancy with offices in Boston, New York, and Los Angeles.
We employed over eight hundred people across three cities. Our client roster included Fortune 500 companies, major non-profits, and emerging startups that would become tomorrow’s industry leaders. The company generated thirty-five million dollars in annual revenue, with profit margins that made our competitors envious.
