Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
of such wickedness. Such sweet wickedness it was! Love, as I have
never known. I want my husband to hear, to pierce his heart the
way he pierced mine so many years ago.
Alas, it is not to be. My rumblings from my perch echo from
the acres of rooftops and I spot Sukeena through the glass roof of
the Solarium. She has broken free of her interrogators and is
appealing in cloistered silence to me, with the pained expression
of the only one who cares. “Don’t do it!” her expression calls out.
“Don’t jump!”
I look on as a uniformed policeman approaches her in the
Solarium, the policeman not seeing me but me seeing him. I look
on as Sukeena spots his arrival. She lifts her arms like a musical
conductor and throws her head back in a haunting display of the
quiet powers she possesses. He retches, gripped by a pain in the
stomach, and I am reminded of our encounter in the Cairo market,
all those years before. I watch, as impossibly the thorny vines
of Sukeena’s remarkable indoor garden, lush as it is with African
creepers and exotic botanical varieties from our year abroad,
come alive with alarming speed. I watch as that dense greenery
runs up the glass as if a thousand snakes, sprouts racing from the
soil demonically. I watch as that policeman, already halted in his
approach, is suddenly tangled and overcome by the twisting,
creeping choke of that instant jungle. As he is consumed.
Sukeena shaking her hands invitingly. The density of the tangle
overcoming even my view of the events below as the glass is
obscured.
And then, I see the policeman no more. My maid’s delicate
hands fall back to her sides. In stunned amazement I watch as the
overgrowth recedes as quickly as it came, suddenly alive with color
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and bloom—a paralyzing red of bougainvillea, orchid and, dare I
admit it, roses. More red roses than I have ever laid eyes upon.
With that canopy removed from overhead, my friend dares to
look once again in my direction. We are quite some distance, and
yet her face is close enough to feel her warm breath, to drink her
earthy perfume. She shakes her head in denial. She will not allow
me to jump, will not allow me to end it. Will not leave April
unfound and Adam without a mother, only that monster of a
father, my husband, to help him fashion a life, to control her
destiny. I am condemned by my love. Of this blue-skinned
woman. Of my magical son. Of a driven man I once allowed to
impregnate me with his seed and thus spoil my fertility forever.
What a fool I feel, exposed like this in an open window, as several
of the of?cers break from the forest with their lights, called by my
shouting and ranting and raving.
And then I see him. John. Below me and to my left, at one of
the many doors leading to the garden. Sukeena sees him too,
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though he does not take note of her. The three of us. Me on the
ledge. John, blithering and drunk and terri?ed he has lost his
daughter to this tomb we call home. Sukeena, surrounded by her
murderous blush and bloom of a thousand red blossoms.
I laugh wildly. Hysterically. Maniacally. I laugh for the policemen
to hear. I laugh for my husband to be sick. I laugh at the
moon and the clouds, the wind in my ears speaking as Rose Red.
“She lives,” says the wind. “She lives in the dower . . .”
Only then do my ears forgive me, only then do clarity and
alacrity impose themselves, a comprehension by the ear prepares
me for the understanding that is to follow. It is not “dower,” as I
once supposed. The word I am to hear is “tower,” and Rose Red
is whispering clearly that this is where my daughter’s future lies—
where my daughter now resides.
The Tower.
A tower not yet built.
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3 a.m.—rose red (sukeena’s chambers)
I shudder to relate to you, Dear Diary, the tragic events of the
past several hours.
Not long after the dramatic occurrence in the Solarium, and
my brief encounter with my husband, did a sense of dread invade
me that rivaled the disappearance of my dear child only hours
earlier. I knew in an instant that this dread involved Sukeena and
that my own intervention was required to spare my sweet friend. I
have suffered much in?rmity these several years, nearly always
cautious in my walking about not to lose balance and fall to the
?oor like some invalid. Yet on this night the eyes I must have
raised with the staff as I ran down the West Wing’s second-story
halls and ?ew down the Grand Stair, my feet barely lighting as I
descended. Drastic action was required of me—I knew this without
so much as a single thought. My response was born from
within me, having little or nothing to do with any kind of thought
process—and for this reason I trusted it, I suppose, or at least I
followed it without question.
“No, John!” I heard myself calling out in an unfamiliar tone,
a tone a wife should never use to address her husband. Especially
in public. (I tell you, Dear Diary, it was not my voice at all, but
one given to me, just as the quickness of limb was given to me.
Just as the voice in the séance was given to me. This, in turn, begs
a greater question upon which I hope to expound at a later date:
that is, if not my voice, if the voice of Rose Red, as I ?rmly
believe, then why was she speaking through me in an attempt—
vain, as it turned out—to save Sukeena? Has this house come to
listen to my handmaid? To talk to her? Do they share some connection
about which I am previously unaware?) “You let her go!”
I roared at him in a voice that was not mine.
John knew that other voice. He is smarter than other men.
Wiser. More experienced. He recognized that voice immediately
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as being the voice of the grand house. Paralyzed, he stood, ?atfooted,
as I ran—ran!—toward him, my dress rising behind me
like a shadow. Two policemen had Sukeena by the arms and were
dragging her toward the open door, beyond which I could see a
car waiting. The police in this city are a model of corruption and
in?uence peddling. (Mayor Gill, now in his third term, has
attempted to change our image by closing the bawdy houses and
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saloons that people the water frontage. He would not dare touch
the police, for they control this town, including the actions of the
mayor!) If Sukeena was placed in that car, I knew well that I might
never see her again. As I approached my husband at full speed, a
thought sparked through me: what if April had not disappeared at
all? What if my husband had ordered her removed brie?y by one
of the loyal staff ? What if this evening’s anxiety was nothing more
than the result of a deftly scripted act of deceit intended to lay
blame on my maid and win her forcible removal from our home?
What if his plans called for her beating, her jailing and the pox or
other illness that seemed to claim the lives of so many of this city’s
jailed? April is removed for one night, and John reclaims the
power over his wife and destroys the one person in this house who
has more power than him. (Discounting the house itself, of
course!) Had my husband tricked me, tricked us all, including
the police (whom he may have bought off ) in an effort to regain
his single authority?
John caught me unawares. He extended his arms in advance of
my fast approach and knocked me off my feet, throwing me down
onto my behind, where I skidded across the polished wood and
came to rest against the wall, directly beneath my own portrait.
“She . . . heard . . . her . . . scream!” he roared. “The only
person to claim to hear anything!”
“She heard the house scream,” I cried, for I was quite aware of
Sukeena’s ?rsthand report.
He snorted derisively at me. “It was our daughter, Ellen. Our
daughter’s last sounds. And this woman must answer for it.”
“Answer for it? This woman? Does she answer for the disappearances?
For your partner’s suicide?” I caught him with my
de?ance. “It . . . is . . . this . . . house. And you know it!”
“I know nothing of the sort.”
An of?cer remained in the open doorway. Beyond him, I saw
Sukeena violently thrown into a police wagon, her head striking
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the frame. She glanced back in my direction. It was the last I saw
of her. I have not seen her since. John nodded toward the of?-
cer—my husband clearly giving his okay—and again my thoughts of
conspiracy surfaced. John had a greater hand in this than I
thought. The man pulled the door shut.
“No!” I cried out.
“A cop has disappeared, Ellen,” my husband said.
“The woods,” I said, making no mention of the sudden bloom
in the Solarium. “There are dozens of them in the woods. One is
lost is all.”
“They found a belt—a policeman’s belt—on the ?oor of the
Solarium. Sukeena was in the Solarium at the time. I think it’s
time you faced up to the fact that your . . . what is she
exactly? . . . your friend . . . grew jealous of your time with our
daughter and has brought her harm. Indeed, has removed her
from the face of this earth.”
“You bastard, John Rimbauer.”
He bent down and slapped me across the cheek. Tears leaped
from my eyes, like beads of juice from an orange slice.
“I’m sorry . . . ,” he mumbled. In our ten years together, my
husband had never laid a hand on me in this way.
Perhaps it was the jarring that this blow caused me—my husband
unleashing his anger. Perhaps it was simply the right time
for me to see the truth, as unadorned as it so often is. For me,
that slap of his was like sunlight through a magnifying glass—
directed, ?erce and intense. A light so bright as to be blinding.
Surprisingly, my husband had it half right. He had nailed it
on the head: jealousy. The clarity of that thought! I thought I
heard the voices of choirs in my ears. Jealousy. But half right was
all. He was wrong about the source of that jealousy—felt over the
past two years as I focused my every waking moment on the love
and progression of sweet April. Not Sukeena at all. But Rose Red.
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She’d grown jealous. And she’d fed off the substantial life
force of my child as a way of extending her own longevity and
striking out at me all at once. Two birds with one stone. Rose Red
has claimed April. She has removed Sukeena as well.
She has me all to herself now. And I shudder at what that
means.
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20 february 1917—rose red
Horror of horrors, do I dare relate what I know now about the
events of the past three days? I know not how much of what has
happened was the result of my husband’s instruction, his determination,
and how much simply the result of a corrupt and bigoted
police force. Naturally, I would prefer to believe the latter,
as I must continue through this lie of a marriage to the former,
and thereby, perhaps, the blame for it all should be laid at my
feet, and mine alone. When I think back now to what I might have
done to save my dear Sukeena . . . Had it not been for fear, had
it not been for grief over the loss of my sweet April, perhaps I
would have been in the presence of mind to formulate some plan,
to articulate my degree of concern, to make demands upon my
husband and those clearly under his control.
Sukeena has failed to return from the police station, or wherever
it is they have taken her. Three full days have passed since
April’s disappearance, and I am teetering on the brink of suicide,
haunted by my husband’s continued stalking of this house like a
cat after a mouse and his approval when the police hauled off my
handmaid late that night in a pitiful rainstorm. Finally, about an
hour ago, I received word, through surreptitious means that I
dare not go into, not even in your trusted pages, Dear Diary
(except to say that one of the staff is close friends with a young
woman whose brother serves on the police department, and that
through this connection I have been privy to information that
otherwise should have never reached my ear). The word is this:
Sukeena has been under lock and key in a basement room in City
Hall for the past three days and nights. She has been denied food,
sleep and even the common decency of a toilet. I am of information
that she has been beaten, berated and quite possibly violated
in the way only a woman can be violated, while her captors con-
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tinue to demand and await her confession–a piece of ?ction she
has quite properly, steadfastly, refused to provide them. I am of a
state, so wrought with grief and overcome with anxiety that I am
in one of my fevers, con?ned to bed, and only weakly able to
make this account in your pages tonight. Immediately upon hearing
of Sukeena’s treatment, her predicament, I wrote my husband
a brief note upon my personal stationery and had it delivered by
Yvonne, a woman I trust implicitly. My note read something like
this:
Dear Husband,