pointed it out to me, because the house was enormous. The Greek Revival house had three floors and white columns out front. We rang the bell on the side door, they never used the front, and the maid answered. She let us in and took us to see Mrs. Epps. The house had that southern close musty, smell of mildew, but otherwise smelled okay. Mr. and Mrs. Epps were in a small television room immediately left of the door. Apparently, Mr. Epps was not ambulatory and lived his days in that room. Mrs. Epps rose from her lazyboy chair to look us over. She was a nondescript thin
elderly lady. She took us up to see the room herself. It was available starting Thursday night. The room was on the second floor in the right front corner of the house. The dimensions looked to be 18 feet by 18 feet and a cool breeze came through the curtained windows on the front and side walls of the house (a good sign). The floors were wide plank hard wood and there was a hooked rug with a rose design on it. There were two single beds and one wooden chair painted white. The walls were painted very light blue and the bed quilts and curtains were cotton with a small blue flowered pattern. It was clean and cozy looking. We would have to share a bathroom with another tenant, a man. There was no shower and the old white bathtub was huge and its feet were shaped like clawed animal paws.The room was $20 a week, and Mary and I could split that amount. We also would have use of the house kitchen which seemed to take up one quarter of the downstairs, it was so big. The kitchen was not as clean as the room, though, and smelled like moldy bread. We took it, and were to move in the following morning. On Wednesday night, the room was not available; but Mrs. Epps said that she had a sun room with two beds in it that we could stay in until Thursday. We would stay at
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