Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
documents (the diary of tina coleman, for
one) promote the idea that john was behind ellen’s
“illness,” and that switzerland was his attempt to
remove her from rose red once and for all. this
plan failed, regardless of its source. on 17 october
1920, a serious FIre claimed an entire wing of rose
red. the cause of that FIre has never been named. it
must be considered as a possibility that ellen set
that FIre herself in protest to john’s attempts to be
rid of her.
a study of the contractor’s notes and plans
show no work on the tower scheduled for nearly
twenty months. another theory behind the FIre and
all their relationship problems was that ellen
found out john was purposely delaying work on the
tower. regardless of disagreements, construction
on the tower began in earnest in early november
1920. to this day, three important questions remain
surrounding the period 1918–1920: (1) ellen’s mental
state; (2) the “activity” of the house (e.g., there
are reports of nearly a dozen disappearances in this
twenty-four-month period); and (3) john’s growing
fear of his wife; his wife’s maid, sukeena; and the
house that together the rimbauers continued to
build, and remodel, at an alarming pace.
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there are writings (though no substantial evidence)
that suggest it was john, not ellen, who had
lost touch with reality, and that during this time
he became badly addicted to laudanum, spending
days at a time in the opium dens south of the city
and away from the monstrosity of a house he had
come to fear.
—joyce reardon
19 june 1921—rose red
Sparks. I see robins outside my window. Twiddle-dee, twiddledum,
I smell smoke in the auditorium. Where have I been? I ask
myself, looking back at your pages. Is it possible I have not written
my thoughts down here, except once in a blue moon? I feel as if I
write here every day, but perhaps that is just my imaginings. I
have been overcome with fever quite regularly. In truth these
fevers always seem to follow my nights spent in the company of my
husband—a pleasant way to write down here what is not often
pleasant at all. For several years now he has included Sukeena in
our . . . participation. I’d rather not say. Twiddle-dee, twiddledum.
Sparks. The servants are out testing explosives for our
annual Fourth of July party. I watch from my window, singing
songs I recall from my childhood. How can childhood seem so far
away, a part of another person’s life, surely not mine? Sparks.
Boom, boom, boom. If once I held any innocence, it has burned
away like the gunpowder in these displays I watch. No innocence
in the bedroom. No innocence at the window (at least not the
night I helped Sukeena wrap George Meader in thorny vines). No
innocence inside my head, where I spend an increasing amount
of time trying to foresee my husband’s maneuvers to remove me
from this place. I’ve hidden from him—up in the attic, still working
on the stairs to the Tower—for days at a time. John wandering
the house calling out, perhaps secretly hoping Rose has claimed
me once and for all. Me, waiting. Waiting. Letting him wet his
whistle on this notion, letting his heart beat with excitement at
the possibility I’m gone forever. And then I waltz into the
Breakfast Room, as if not away from him for more than a few
minutes. I watch his face sag. I smile enormously and greet him
with bright, rested eyes and good humor. Later, he stews. Angry.
Alone. I like him that way: angry and alone. I want him to pay for
all the innocence he has taken from me. From us.
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I talk to Rose openly now. No longer afraid. I tell her I want
to see my daughter. I offer myself to her walls. But she asks
strange things of me. We have remodeled an upstairs hall to
become the Perspective Hallway: it diminishes in the same fashion
as train tracks, one end to the other. It’s in honor of the late
George Meader and his rail company, but this is a hall—and the
deeper you enter it, the lower the ceiling, the tighter the walls. It
is not unlike my life itself—the longer I have lived, the more con-
?ned I feel by my surroundings. (At thirty-four, I feel more like
eighty years of age.) I have hidden doors off the Perspective
Hallway, in the same manner my husband has hidden his viewing
rooms throughout this palace. Some go nowhere. Others lead to
mazes of hallways. (In one such secreted hallway I hung a great
nude on the other side of glass, just to annoy my husband should
he stray inside. Life imitates art, they say. Or is it the other way
around?)
To-day marks the grand opening of the Tower. (Our friends,
I hear tell, are referring to my endeavor as “the tower folly.” Be
that as it may, I’m quite proud of the addition.) It includes the
stairs that lead from the attic to a single room of generous proportions
offering a full, panoramic view of all of Rose’s wings,
our property and its forests, as well as the commanding sight of
the city and Elliott Bay beyond. It is the most beautiful, most
important addition to our grand home, and is certain to take its
place as one of my favorite spots. Now that it is open—complete
with the lovely Venetian glass window and the twenty-four-karat
gold-plated Italian cherub that adorns the peak of its roof—I feel
as if I have a retreat of sorts, a place to hide, a place to pray, a
place to seek my missing daughter.
John has not been in favor of the Tower. (He fears I put too
much faith in the Tower helping me to locate April, and I admit
here that he is quite right about that—my faith, that is—but our
beliefs differ so greatly that John also trusts that there is little or
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no hope of any such physical structure providing a conduit, a
medium that might reconnect us with our missing April, a fallacy
in him I strive to correct!)
My mind wanders so frequently now, led as I am in so many
directions. My “wonderings” come with more frequency and last
longer. I see the staff steer clear of me in the hallways, shaken by
my pale face, no doubt, or my unsteady walk. They have never lost
a child, as I have. They have never compromised their existence as
I have, obeying my husband and tolerating untold embarrassments
in order to remain in the house of my child’s disappearance.
(To leave John would certainly mean leaving Rose—and that
is even more unthinkable now than it was before.) Sukeena and I
have agreed to meet at midnight (providing John does not call for
our services) and, with the completion of the Tower, attempt to
summon sweet April. We will climb and listen for the winds that
have instructed me for these past several years, my hands bloodied
with my efforts as a carpenter. It seems to me I shall always be
putting ?nishing touches on my attic stairway, which ascends,
through three turns, to the Tower. It will never be perfect, will
always require attention—but so does a child, of course. This
Tower is my child, just as my child is this Tower. How could I
ever neglect it for even a single day? But alas, I am late for my
rendezvous with my maid.
Sukeena and I meet in the upstairs hallway, alongside the panel
that I had discovered previously, and let ourselves in. I carry a
battery-powered ?ashlight, heavy as it is, and lead the way along
the now familiar route, past the guests’ quarters, up and into the
attic. We stand at the base of my stairs, where the early work of my
carpentry is seen for what it is: crude and poorly done. Through
the door, the bottom stair is crooked, as are the next three, those
in lessening proportions. The wood is still raw and untreated, as I
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have much work yet to do and will not allow any of the workers to
touch a thing here. We climb slowly, to cries and complaints of
the poorly assembled stairs, and I shine the light on Sukeena as
she lags behind. Even she appears frightened. I take this as a good
sign and encourage her on. I certainly must look a bit ghostly
myself, drained of color as I am of late, standing there in my
sheer nightgown, the yellow light ?ashing around unsteadily as I
wave the ?ashlight unintentionally in my right hand, directing
her. Perhaps Sukeena is more afraid of me than this Tower. I
shouldn’t be surprised, everyone else seems to fear me and my
condition.
Now, as we approach the second turn, I ?nally hear what it is
that has frightened my dear friend, what she has heard that I did
not—the creaking of the stairs no longer sounds like lumber rubbing
on lumber, nails straining against nails—increasingly it
sounds like a voice, a familiar voice, a child’s voice. April! The
higher we climb, the more the creaking goes to wind, the wind to
voice: “Ma-ma . . .” it calls, and I hurry my ascent, climbing all
the faster. Sukeena, protective perhaps, is nearly running to keep
up with me. “Miss Ellen!” she calls, the condition of warning carried
in her tone. It is as if she fears that the door at the very top
of these stairs, a door that grows larger by the moment, will lead
not to the panoramic view I anticipate but to some dark, foreboding
place, where young April is kept hidden. And those who
enter, along with it.
Alas, as I burst through the upper door and out into the brisk
night chill (the Tower is not heated) I am bathed in colorful
light. For a moment, I feel as if I’m in the “light of God,” and I
wonder if indeed Rose Red has not claimed me and is in the
process of transporting me to wherever April lives. (I always think
of April as alive, but in another place; my motherly ways will allow
no other consideration.) Then I see Sukeena circling the Tower
in front of me. It is the moon and the stained-glass window that
have poured this light across me.
“April,” I call out, the wind rushing up the stairs below and
encompassing me: “Ma-ma, ma-ma.” I feel dizzy. My child is so
very close. I can smell her. Taste her sweet cheeks as I kiss away
her tears. I fall to my knees, trembling. I am pointing. Sukeena
misunderstands, believing I am pointing to her. Then, she slowly
looks around behind her, in the same direction as my ?nger is
aimed.
She, too, falls down onto her knees. She lowers her head and
kisses the boards we kneel upon—the ?oor to the Tower. The
Temple, I shall think of it from now on. I ordered that stainedglass
window of the rose more than a decade earlier, while on my
honeymoon with my husband, before the birth of Adam, before
the birth of April. And yet here, backlit by the full moon as it is,
the sound of my daughter’s voice swirling through the rotunda,
so clear, and crisp and young, this multicolored window does not
depict a rose at all. The tones and patterns have shifted in this
shimmering light, the moon playing tricks on the eyes—or so
some would say.
Instead of a rose in that window, it is a face that Sukeena and I
now see. As clear and as apparent as if I’d instructed the artisans
to fashion it in this regard so many years ago. But how could they
have? She wasn’t born yet. For you see, Dear Diary, the image in
that lovely window is not a rose at all, but a portrait. It is the face
of my child, April. Just as she looked the day she disappeared. As
the wind blows eerily in our ears, her lips move. And she talks
to me.
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16 november 1921
I return to your pages after too long an absence. John’s proclivity
toward moodiness has increased with each month. He seems tired
so much of the time. He returns from the city late, late at night
with odd smells on his clothing. (The closest I have come to experiencing
these same odors was while visiting Madame Lu.) His
husbandly appetites have subsided. He has not visited my chambers
in nearly three months. I cannot speak of my fears on these
pages, but I imagine the worst for poor John. While his fortune
continued to grow, his partnership dissolved, a good friend had
“an unfortunate accident” in his Health Room, his daughter disappeared
and his home began building itself without him. (A
protracted battle erupted between John and our contractor when
the contractor accused my husband of shopping out work to a
moonlighting crew, for a great deal of carpentry work is often
accomplished overnight within the walls of Rose Red. No explanation
has been given, but the contractor has been replaced by
one who asks no such questions.)
In the midst of his “depression” (what the doctors are calling
it) John has twice tried to force me to travel to Switzerland (once,
this summer, and again, in late September) to attend a health
clinic where he hoped I might ?nd peace from my af?iction with
fever. Reunited with my daughter as I am in my late-night visits
(wisely, I have told John nothing of this), I refuse to budge.
Nothing can take me from Rose Red now. (Sukeena believes this