Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
after his discovery. He locked the door behind himself and was
half undressed by the time he reached my bedside. I opened my
mouth to warn him of Sukeena’s presence, but his mouth was on
mine before those words found their way out. My God was he
excited!
I must confess my attention was not fully on my husband,
knowing that my handmaid was basically in the room with us, and
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the electric lights still on! Sukeena had no escape, for there is no
exit from the dressing rooms other than through my chambers.
She could not have escaped our union if she had wanted to (and
I’m sure she did!). As John unleashed more ardor toward me
than perhaps ever before, we had a witness. Was he trying to erase
the thoughts of Douglas Posey’s fascination with boys? Was he
drunk to the point that a naked woman prone on fresh linen was
too much to bear? (Even if it was his wife!) Whatever the case, his
advances . . . the lengths to which he went (which will certainly
not be discussed here!) reminded me that a man and a woman
can still make discoveries about each other well into a marriage. I
bit down on my wrist and ?nally took to stuf?ng a corner of a
pillow into my mouth before I woke half the city. In the midst of
our most excited moment, I glanced over John’s shoulder only to
see Sukeena’s dark face staring out from the doorway to the dressing
rooms. Sukeena, smiling back at me. And though I cannot
explain it, the knowledge of her there looking on drove me to a
heightened passion. Finally, I slumped back to the headboard,
sweating and panting, and ?ushed from my chest to my knees.
Without a word, John redressed, kissed my forehead, and left
my chambers.
A moment later, Sukeena slunk from the shadows of the
dressing room and made for the door.
“Don’t go,” I said.
“Sukeena sorry, Miss Ellen.”
“I’m not, dear friend.”
“I should not have looked.”
“I don’t mind that you did.”
She looked at me timidly. “Sukeena sorry,” she repeated.
“It isn’t always like that.”
“The heat, Miss Ellen. The heat do strange thing to a man.”
She moved toward the bed cautiously, for though she had seen me
fully undressed a hundred times, never quite in the state I was. “A
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pillow, Miss.” She indicated my bottom. “Use the pillow, you
want the child.”
Another child . . . My heart skipped little beats. Use the pillow
you want a child. I used two pillows, though I suspected none
was needed. Never had my husband been quite like that. I imagined
that if ever there was cause for a woman to be with child, I
had just experienced such a moment.
And I know that I am right. I am with child. If true, it will be a
spring baby.
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9 april 1911—rose red
We will call her April, for that is the month of her birth, but the
Devil delivered this child and the Devil’s she is. The childbirth
was unbearable, the doctor working at my bedside for nearly
seven hours to save my life and that of my child. She has been
born with a withered arm, and I’m told that arm would not allow
a proper birth, and so they cut me, and then cut me some more
and ?nally took the baby by a means only ranchers use—but
thankfully my doctor was raised on a sheep ranch. She lives—little
April with bright blue eyes and John’s sturdy looks. She will be
my last child, I’m told, and I’ve been sick with grief over it. They
saved my life, but not my womanhood. Whatever accounts for a
woman having babies, I am now without. Barren. Just the thought
of it prevents me from getting out of bed. I have not left my bed
in a week (April was born on the ?rst day of the month—the second
anniversary of Laura’s disappearance!), not that the doctor
would let me get up, but I wouldn’t have even if he had allowed it.
No more children. No more reason to be in this family with this
man whose seed is so foul as to wither the arms of his young—for
Sukeena explained that my illness in Africa is to blame for April’s
deformity. I hate my husband. I hate my life. I hate this house
that holds us all like prisoners. I shall stop writing now, for I hate
even you, Dear Diary. I hate reading back and seeing a time where
a choice still existed in my life. What have I done? Who is this
creature I have married who would—intentionally or not—poison
our children in conception!? Who are these whores he takes up
with that their venom ends up in the roots of our family tree? I
hate them all. You, them, everything.
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21 may 1911—rose red
My mood has improved in the weeks since my last entry. I could
not even look at these pages for so long. Could not review the
decline of my life and the tragedy of my marriage. Today, in the
blossoms of spring and the music of the songbirds, I sit in the
garden with Adam playing ringtoss with his nanny, with April at
my side, your pages open on my lap, a pen in hand.
I am delighted to say another maid has gone missing. Giddy
even. It is a girl identi?ed by Sukeena as having had intimate
relations with John prior to that hot July night when April was
conceived. It is a girl I wanted ?red, but one whom Sukeena suggested
remain in our employ. And then I understood. It was then
I ?xed my prayers to this girl. Prayers made to the other side. I
begged for her demise. I offered my April’s withered arm as
example of evil. And I waited patiently for a response. Sukeena
made a doll. She covered it in black paper and hid it in a drawer.
To-day, we have our answer. While John and the rest of the
house mill about anxiously searching for the young waif, I sit
proudly quiet in the sunlight of the garden, a wry grin allowed
upon my lips. Let them bring on the police. Let them bring on
the dogs. They will not ?nd her. Let them ask all the questions
they like—they cannot conceive of the truth (ah! there’s that word
“conceive” again, appropriate as ever!). The police have no idea
of the spirit that inhabits this place—if they did, they would burn
her to the ground. Burn her like a witch. Rose Red has claimed
another disloyal subject. And I swear she feeds off it! She looks
bigger to-day. She does! More impressive than ever. Or perhaps
it’s just me.
Such a ?ne, ?ne day is this. I mark it here in your pages for
little April to someday know that her arm has been avenged. At
least partly.
I’m not sure I’m done with my prayers just yet.
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I laugh into the sunshine. Little Adam looks up and laughs
along with me. The nanny looks slightly disturbed at this levity,
given the disappearance. But I laugh just the same. Let them call
me crazy if they want. I’ve connected to Rose Red.
I do believe that I’m beginning to understand her.
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23 june 1912—rose red
With dear little April over a year old, and young Adam growing
like a weed, I re?ect on the year just past and how our lives here at
Rose Red have ?nally settled down. Perhaps this can be attributed
to the fact that John took nearly four months in Europe and the
Far East, opening up new business for the oil company. (His
geologists believe there is oil to be found under the deserts of
Saudi Arabia—of all places!—and John has put this and neighboring
countries under contract to allow Omicron to explore.) With
John gone, the house seemed to take a rest, and once again I
found myself discounting my suspicions that Rose Red could be
thought of as a person.
To-day I have dreamed a horrible thing. Just how it will affect
those of us at Rose Red, I have not the slightest. In my dream, a
bridge collapsed. It was very high, spanning a torrent of water not
unlike Niagara Falls, where John and I visited following our
return to New York from our year abroad. This bridge fell into
that torrent and killed dozens of people, their screams swallowed
by the roar that engulfed them. It is not my ?rst vision. It shall
not be my last.
I admit to you, Dear Diary, that I have not felt terribly stable
since praying that young tart into the clutches of this grand
house. Sukeena, God bless her, has gotten to the truth of the
young vixen, Delora (the Christian name of the girl), and it was
nothing like I thought it was. (I bear the burden of a tremendous
guilt over my prayers now!)
According to one of our Oriental maids, a girl named Kathy,
Delora White had complained to her about her situation with the
carriage master, not knowing what to do. It seems that like young
Laura, one of her assignments took her to the Carriage House at
least once a week, sometimes twice. It was here that Daniel began
to ask questions—often just following a visit (an arrival or depar-
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ture) by my husband, in motorcar or on horseback. The questions
seemed peculiar to Delora—how often she got out, whether
or not she had boyfriends on the staff, where she came from, how
often she spoke to her family. But the real questions that stung
her were about loyalty to “the family,” the Rimbauers. To John
and me. To John. She reportedly replied that she owed the family
everything and would do anything for us.
This is as much as Sukeena knows, but I fear I have done this
child wrong by my prayers to remove her. It sounds to me as if
Daniel, at the very least, and quite possibly John himself, has
been working with the minds of the young housemaids, testing
how far their loyalty will carry them. To what end, I need not
guess. What else could Daniel be asking of girls like Delora, but
to submit to a man’s needs? Theft? This house does not need
money. Deceit? To what end? No, I think it is quite clear what
Daniel asked of her.
What intrigues me now, however, is my mistaken assumption
that my prayers were responsible for Delora’s disappearance.
Perhaps not. Perhaps I do not know this house as well as I
thought. Perhaps Rose Red herself feels sorry for these young
girls, holding them in her arms, as she does, while they are in the
midst of unspeakable acts demanded of them by their employers.
Perhaps these disappearances are missions of mercy, not of condemnation!
What if she is protecting them from within? What if
their blind loyalty to this house later causes guilt on the part of
the very house to which they’ve sworn their loyalty? What choice
would Rose Red have but to save them from themselves, to transport
them through her walls to rooms where they will live safely
forever? This might further explain why men die and women disappear
in these halls.
Now, more than ever, I wish to commune with Rose Red, to
enter within her and divine answers to these outstanding questions.
Madame Lu once offered to put me in touch with Madame
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Stravinski, and I am remiss for not following up on this offer.
Whether a month or a year away, I feel the absolute necessity for a
séance. Here. On this property. With my husband in attendance.
(I am amazed that John has expressed an interest in both he and
Douglas Posey attending. He’s openly curious about the event.)
Perhaps Laura is there and can speak. Delora? Maybe the grand
house, the lady herself, would condescend to communicate with
those of us responsible for her birth and growth.
I feel light-headed with just the thought! A séance. The
chance to hear the voice that lurks behind the walls of this enormous
edi?ce. Rose Red. Here. In person.
I shall not make another note in these pages until that day
does come!
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24 june 1912—rose red
Reading back, I see I lied! (Here I am writing again already! I
can’t leave your pages!)
Oh, Dear Diary, tell me this isn’t happening to me! First, my
daydream about the bridge, during yesterday’s nap. Then, to-day
in the paper, front-page news that the bridge at Niagara Falls collapsed
yesterday. Forty-seven people fell to their deaths. How did
I know? How did I see this as it was happening? What power lurks
inside me? What is happening to me?
I know the answer: Rose Red has found her ways into my
dreams . . . into my soul . . . and I am powerless to stop her.
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23 july 1912—rose red
John is quite excited by the possibility of war. I will never understand
men, except to say that John believes it will expand his oil
business considerably, and if there’s a way to gain riches, John
Rimbauer is ever aware. There are reports to-day that the Brits
have ordered their powerful Navy into the North Sea, in a
buildup against the Germans. These same reports say that the
Germans attempted to corner the Brits into signing a mutual
declaration of neutrality, but the Brits would have none of it.
John believes a business trip to Europe is imminent, perhaps for
as long as six months or so, and has asked that the children and I
join him! To be free of Rose Red!! I accepted his offer immediately,
until he informed me that Sukeena would have to stay, to
make room for the children’s nannies.