Greg's Bedroom
Located on the second floor of the Carriage House in the far right back corner, its windows are the best kept in the house. Though mossy and rimmed with decayed wood, the windows are unbroken and the hinges gleam as if new. The door is on the wall closest to the garage-side of the house. It is located in the middle of the wall. One of the windows sits on the wall across form the door. It is closer to the most outward corner of the room. The other window is in the center of the wall that connects at the same corner. Both windows are decorated with heavy, deep purple drapes that are sashed open. A metal bed similar to the one in the Manor’s Bedroom sits directly in front of the window on the wall across form the door. The foot of the bed faces the door’s wall. The bed is meticulously made up with once-white bedding that is yellowing with age. A rickety bedside table holds a pile of old books and a candlestick in a simple metal holster. Facing the door, to the right of it stands a medium-sized bookshelf. Once it may have been painted a pure white, but now it is nearly paintless and splintery. All of the books are old, most completely dust covered. A simple unpainted writing desk and chair sit facing the wall opposite to the door-wall in the corner opposite the window-corner. There are very little things on the desk except a few ink jars, fountain pens and a stack of crinkled yellow paper. An ancient rug covers the middle of the floor, faded to a decayed almost white. It has many holes. The walls of the room are an expanse of chipping paint in various ages and colors, most bleached to almost non-color by the sun and years of abandonment. The hardwood floor is old, creaky, and dust- covered. Some floorboards are missing. The light form the windows shine in, greened by the trees, faded by the windows, and splotchy by the dirt on the windows.
Bedroom in side the old Carriage House
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Engslish
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refer to Oak Woods
Oak Woods
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Livingston House's old Carriage House, Oak Woods, Alabama Oak Woods The Carriage House
Built to house extra lower-class guests and workers in the Livingston Home.
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early 19th century
Line that connects to Peter's room connects just at Greg's window.
This location was created by Zoë Jacks on Notebook.ai.
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