Guido Sarto-Reutter is a fourteen-year old son of a Venetian-Austrian aristocratic family, that, in 1920, is both in poverty and riddled by scandal because both Guido's father and grandfather have, for years, been bedded by a Vienna baron in his castle. Guido is in a Venetian charity school for sons of families in straits like his run by a count who is pimping the boys. Guido has no trouble falling in with this demand, and the count has found a possible buyer for the boy.
Fourteen-year-old mulatto slave boy Sweet barely settles into the rice plantation, Riverside, up the Cooper River from Charleston, before his new master is dealing him to Charleston gambling house and male brothel owner Chance Drake to pay off a gambling debt.
Not thoughtful, smut. Dale's an outwardly normal family man: twin boys (6), loving curvy wife Rose, curvy stepdaughter Dee (18), steady work, drives a new F-150. But he's discovered suppressed information, and he needs to stand up for his rights. Within just weeks, his marriage is in shambles. Principles or family? And by family, eventually, we mean exaggerated group sex that includes Rose and Dee. Also (Dee's boyfriend) Dan, and Dan's mother, who are very close--and unclothed.