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The Orphans
James Prideaux
For the past 25
years Lily and Catherine Spangler have lived in seclusion in their hotel
room, their only visitor being their lawyer, who delivers (in cash)
the profits from the steel mill they inherited from their father. When
they first moved into the Chalfont it was the best hotel in town, but
the years have taken their toll, and now (although the sisters are not
aware of it) it is rundown, almost deserted, and limping along with
a skeleton staff.
The clientele has
suffered too; their next-door-neighbor is a prostitute with a heart
of gold, and the bellhop, Herman, is a con artist who schemes to cheat
the sisters out of the six million dollars he knows they have tucked
away in a trunk by passing himself off as a long-lost cousin.
Lily, the older
sister, who has persuaded Catherine that she has protected her from
"all the cares of the world," is guarded and suspicious about
all this, but the gentle, warm-hearted Catherine, who is aching to know
more of life and the outside world, falls easily into Herman's trap.
Inevitably their
isolation must end, but facing reality, and the truth, proves to be
a great deal easier--and funnier--than either sister had ever imagined.
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