The Case Of The Weird Sisters (1943) - Plot & Excerpts
"Yes. Yes, he does. First the big lamp fell off the upstairs hall table and just missed his head. And then they had an accident m the car, and he was injured. And now... It is a lot of bad luck, isn't it?" "I think I want to talk to Miss Brennan," Duff said, So, as soon as you're ready . . ." They walked up the hill together. Duff accommodating his long-legged stride to Susan's short one. They were a strange pair. The little old lady with the rosy face, in her dolman and old-fashioned hat, and the tall lean man whose clothes, in spite of their unstudied style, hung on his frame with a certain grace that marked him for a city guy. "You will have to tell me more about the Whitlock family." Duff said. "So, as soon as you're ready. . ." "Dear me, "Susan said, "the girls are not much younger than I am. Gertrude's fifty-five. And Isabel must be fifty-one herself. They were young women when I married their father. Or, rather, when their father married me.
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