
Hefner no longer insisted on dragging them out to clubs to capture the attention of the paparazzi. Madison said shooting it was "the time of her life."ĭoing the series brought another unexpected bonus for Madison. In the pictorial, the three blonds piled on top of each other in bed with their breasts taped to produce maximum effect. Things improved, Madison writes, after the crew of siliconed babes was weaned down to the three featured on "The Girls Next Door." For one thing, Madison finally landed the cover of Playboy - though shared with the other two. Still, they routinely broke house rules by smoking meth in the bedrooms and snorting cocaine when Hefner's head was turned. The girlfriends sneered at Hefner behind his back but feared his infantile temper tantrums when he would kick his feet and cry. It was a different story back when she was a waitress, broke and so eager to enter the mansion she would have beaten down doors. Hefner was so desperate to keep Madison at the end that she claims he wrote a provision into his will leaving her $3 million if she was still at the mansion when he died. "I'm sure Hef knew this, too, and that was the only reason he decided to humor me and submit anything at all."

"Hef had submitted semen samples to a fertility doctor only to find what the doctor had predicted all along - that nothing from this 70-something-year-old man was viable," she writes. Madison now thinks he was merely stringing her along to keep her from walking out.

Hefner, then approaching 80, even committed to having children with her. Madison, who starred with fellow Hef girlfriends Wilkinson and Bridget Marquardt in the hit E! reality series "The Girls Next Door," says she convinced herself that she had found true love with the man old enough to be her great-grandfather.
