and slept with models, and spent more on clothes and shoes and hair-care
products than most teenaged girls.
They were both, perfectly normal, spoiled, filthy-rotten, bratty, entitled, whiny
rich teenaged boys.
Their father, Derrick, a self-made man who spent most of his time on the
road, had married early – too early – and once the strain of parenthood set in,
his first wife bailed on him and his two sons. That was years ago. The boys had
practically never known a real mother.
Wives two-through-five didn’t have any interest or experience in parenting his
boys, and some even viewed the boys as a barrier to cashing in on Derrick’s
money. They were weary of what women could do to their family, and had developed quite a negative view of the fairer sex. This outlook on women would
very likely lead them to be womanizers in their later lives, but in the shortterm, it led them to not fully trust anyone but each other.
Derrick tried his best to raise his then-six-month-ol |