To say that the Richmonds were hellraiser extraordinaires was to say that the earth had water. No one would expect the children of two upright, austere lawyers to blossom into the upper-class rogues of London. And as the English class society goes, they truly were the outlaws upon that advantageous step of the social ladder.
First, there was Eleanor, the eldest. She would eventually go on to become a wealthy entrepreneur with her husband and his family. Next, there was Robert, whose chosen calling was the West End stage and Shakespeare's Globe. Then, there was Thomas, a potential businessman who descended into self-mutilation through dirty d