Holly Madison says, when it was time for her to leave the mansion, Playboy founder Hugh Hefner put her in his will and offered her $3 million if she remained his girlfriend.
In her new memoir, Down the Rabbit Hole: Curious Adventures and Cautionary Tales of a Former Playboy Bunny, Madison writes tried to buy her with his will.
"'Would you like a Quaalude?'," she says Hefner asked her when they first met. "'Usually, I don't approve of drugs, but you know, in the '70s they used to call these pills thigh openers.'"
Madison, who was one of Hefner's three girlfriends for five years, explains when she tried to leave the 78-year-old dangled a carrot to get her to stay.
"It was there, in black and white," she writes. "The will stated that $3,000,000 would be bestowed to Holly Madison at the time of his death if I still lived in the Mansion. At the time, it was more money than I'd ever know what to do with."
"But I didn't want it. I actually pitied him for stooping to that level. I couldn't help but be offended."
"Did he really think he could buy me? I put the folder back on the bed just as I had found it and never breathed a word of it."
"I learned Hef was the manipulator and that he pitted us against one another," Madison notes. "I realized I wasn't treated well."
"I'm done being afraid of people. I don't have any loyalty to Hef. I haven't talked to him in four years, so there's no reason to reach out now. Besides, it's the truth."
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