After my sister was born, Pete decided to let his son live there in exchange for running the roadhouse. During the week, George worked for Quick Service Laundry. When he was out driving the delivery truck, he would put flyers on parked cars advertising Saturday night dances and chicken dinners on Sunday at the inn. (Chicken plucking was also on his resume.)
I am guessing my father got an extra good deal on these business cards because his name is misspelled.
I only have one rather desultory photo of the Inn's interior. Seems like everyone is waiting for Godot including my grandfather Pete who is standing to the right of the stage.
A year later the word "smoker" took on a whole new meaning on a windy night in March. My parents hosted a friend's birthday party earlier in the evening. They had cake and danced, mostly to "Hold Tight" which was in heavy rotation on the music box as my mother called it in her journal. The party broke up just before midnight, and after shutting down the Inn, my father fell asleep while Bebe was reading in bed. She heard rustling noises in the attic and wondered why they still had rats with all of the new cats roaming the property. She woke up George, and after listening a moment, he went down the long hall to investigate. When he pushed open the trap door to the attic, he discovered flames and yelled back to my mother to wake the household which included their helpers Mary Louise and Horace. They left the building at 12:15. My father went back in with Horace to try and save a few things, but it was too smoky. Half of the building was already consumed by flames. George drove his DeSoto four miles to the Forrestville fire department to get help, but by the time he returned, the inn had burned to the ground. The devastation took less than forty five minutes, and the recruited firemen used their resources to save the woods and neighboring houses.
George and Bebe lost everything that night except the clothes on their backs which were pajamas. They stayed with a neighbor and had to borrow clothes to drive into town the next day. Pete eventually sold the property to Andrews Air Force Base. My father found an apartment on E Street a week later, and they started over from scratch with donated clothing and furniture.
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