Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
243
“Come,” she said.
“I can’t. Do you hear that?”
“Hear only the wind, sir,” she lied. “Mustn’t be afraid of the
wind.”
“Is that all it is?”
“Oh, yes, sir. The Tower get all sort of the winds.” She
reminded him, “The quilt, sir. When we to lie down, the wind no
longer make the sound.” She tugged on his arm. “The master not
afraid of a little wind?”
When one needs John to budge, one resorts to his playing
against his own impressions of himself. This trick worked. He
?uffed himself up, expanded his chest and took after my maid
once again, slowing ascending the misshapen staircase leading to
the Tower.
She threw the door open.
It had to be the right night. We knew that in our early stages of
planning. First, a full moon—for these are the nights that April
will visit. Second, that time of night when the moon sits just
above the horizon, fully lighting the stained-glass window there.
We knew what would be said. The stress of an in?rm wife. His
daughter disappearing like that. The gambling. The visits to
Chinatown. The social pressures that wealth can bring.
Sukeena entered the Tower ?rst. The voice was so clearly
April’s now. “Da . . . da . . . ,” it said. John stepped in behind,
and the door gently swung shut behind him. In the stained-glass
window, the lovely rose changed before our eyes into a ghostly
specter of my daughter’s misshapen and withered arm. The wind
asked, “These are your gifts to your children?” My husband stood
as if his shoes had been nailed to the ?ooring. The hand in the
window, my daughter’s hand, plain as day, beckoned him, her
?nger waving him toward her. “Da . . . da. Come . . .
Look . . .”
If all those years ago in Africa a person had told me that
someday the spirits would join me in the ful?llment of my wishes,
I might have imagined pure love between husband and wife—
worldly travel and long sumptuous meals that added not a pound
to my frame. A family of six children. Songs by the ?re in the
evenings and a game of whist with friends after supper. I might
never have imagined this.
John took one ?nal step closer to the window. He looked to
his feet: no quilt. He looked up and saw me hovering behind the
door, for it had been me who had shut it, closing him in.
The power of two women can be formidable, especially when
combined with the determination of years of struggle and anger
that had steeped inside both Sukeena and me. She took an arm
and yanked, spinning him. I charged with all my strength. But in
the end it was neither Sukeena nor me. I only wish it were so. It
was April—that enormous wind—that did the job for us. I threw
my weight into John, certainly. Sukeena pulled with all her substantial
strength. A look of shock and surprise—the hunter
hunted—my husband lifted off his feet in an ungainly and weightless
manner. There, he faced our daughter in the stained-glass
window. April smiled and blinked and repeated one last time,
“Da . . . da.” (At that moment I wondered, had it been
Sukeena’s and my idea, or had it been April’s all along?)
John Rimbauer planted his feet. He skidded across the
wooden planks, and I swear I smelled burning wood as his heels
dragged. He ?ew up and through the window, exploding it into a
thousand pieces, and plunged down and off the slate roof from
some ?fty feet above the ?agstone terrace. I recall him insisting
upon the construction of that abysmal front terrace. I had never
cared for it.
I like it a lot better now that it’s rose red.
244
26 february 1923
My son came home to-day and together we buried his father.
Hundreds attended, from women whose names I did not want to
know, to the dockhands who thought of him as a personal friend,
to the bankers, businessmen and public of?cials who have made
their careers off him. I stood in all black, crying real tears, holding
my son ?rmly by the shoulder—the ?rst time I have seen him
in nearly three years.
It is dif?cult to express in these pages the acute sense of loss,
of grief that I am experiencing. Despite all the atrocious things
John Rimbauer did to me, the pain he brought to my life, I
admired him greatly, loved him at times and marveled at his success.
Even with the gambling losses he leaves behind a dynasty, a
king’s fortune as it turns out.
Adam and I spent the later part of the afternoon walking the
woods where he and his father hunted squirrels and rabbit. After
some reminiscing and retelling of stories about his father, Adam
?nally brought up the subject he had avoided for years.
“Is it haunted?” he asked, looking not at me but at his own
boots in the wet leaves.
“It’s possessed,” I answered honestly. “That’s the best way I
can put it.”
“As in ‘ghosts’?”
“Spirits.”
We stopped on the trail, overlooking Lasky Pond.
“And April?”
Here was the discussion I had so longed to have with my son. I
knew that John had colored his opinion. The newspaper, perhaps
at John’s bidding, had reported a day or two later that the ice on
Lasky Pond was found broken, and that April might have fallen
through. (I wonder, then, that we never found the body!) This
became the generally accepted view: an accident on the pond; a
245
bear who had gotten close to the city; a mountain lion. Anything
but the truth.
“She’s in the house, Adam.”
“That’s preposterous, Mother!” It was my husband’s voice,
though carried in my son’s body, and the effect was disarming.
How quickly they learn.
“Why do you think your father found ways all these years to
keep you from returning to the house? You think he was afraid of
the woods? This pond? He was afraid of the walls.”
“Father was afraid of nothing.”
“We’re all afraid of something, dear. Your father was a great
man. But he was afraid of the truth. He ?red Douglas Posey to
avoid facing the truth; he kept you from this house, your home.
Never fear the truth, Adam. It’s the only real passport you have to
reach new levels of understanding. You may ?nd it corny, but the
truth can set you free.”
“It is corny.” He toed the fallen leaves, burrowing a wet hole
into the forest ?oor and overturning a small, shiny rock.
“If you stay long enough, it may be possible for you to hear
her voice.”
“Mother . . .”
“What? I’m crazy? You can tell me, Adam. You tell me.”
246
247
1 march 1923
So it was that on a perfectly still night, three days later, my son
and I climbed the creaking Tower steps toward that place where
his father had met his death. Adam is a good-looking, strong boy
of thirteen, with wide shoulders and thoughtful eyes. Despite his
adolescent strength, he moved cautiously and nervously up those
stairs, the wind rising in our ears. Wind, at ?rst. Then the soft
calling of his sister’s voice.
As their mother I had forgotten how close these two had
been—nearly inseparable, until Adam was shuttled off to boarding
school. They had grown up nearly as twins—Adam helping his
slightly incapacitated sister; April as foil for his games and test
subject for his inventions.
My young boy, whom this school had developed prematurely
into a young man, collapsed down onto the steps and wept
openly, falling into his mother’s arms, and knowing this was no
trick. He was afraid, and I should have thought about his tender
age and realized it was too soon for him. There would be plenty
of time for all this. Why had I insisted on rushing it? Why had I
felt nearly desperate to prove my sanity to my child? (Is such a
thing provable anyway?)
As it was, mother and son eventually reached the Tower, sitting
on its wooden ?oor. The open hole that had been the
stained-glass window was now boarded up. Someday I will manage
to replace that window. We huddled together, crying, laughing.
Adam tried to talk back to that whispering voice, and though I did
not understand the exchange, I would swear here on these pages
that he spoke with his sister. I know for a fact that he returned to
the Tower each and every night and spent hours up there.
He is back at school now. But he’s writing me, nearly daily—
this son who had been virtually absent from my life. I feel whole
again. Woman. Mother. John’s absence is more tolerable each
passing day. Peace has returned to Rose Red. Adam and I are a
family again.
Nothing so sweet.
248
249
19 february 1928
Dear God in Heaven! Give her back to me!
Sukeena has gone missing! Last seen in the Health Room! No
sign of her anywhere, I wander this tomb’s endless hallways wondering
why everyone who becomes so close to me ends up stolen
from my life. Robbed from me. I hate this house. Despise it! I
will never invite Adam back again.
The staff is nearly sick with looking for my maid, so many
hours—days now!—have we been at it. The house is impossibly
large. Believe this or not, Dear Diary, we all have witnessed physical
transformations. Hallways change structure and appearance
behind your back. Rooms disappear! What is going on? How can
it be? A physical structure, a building, and yet ?uid as water. A
chameleon. She no longer requires growing larger—she reinvents
herself internally. Once a hallway, now a ballroom; once a basement,
now a dungeon!
I ordered all Sukeena’s plants uprooted from the Health
Room (for upon her disappearance, it bloomed more richly than
I have ever seen—every plant at once in full blossom!). I watched
that task carried out—watched it with my own eyes from up in my
chambers, recalling my past observation of other events down
there as well. Seven workers took three hours to clear the room
down to bare soil. By the time they reached the west end, the east
had sprouted new plants. By the following morning, the plants
were six feet tall—taller than they’d ever been, and in full bloom.
That is Sukeena providing that bloom—her love, her energy, her
powers.
We all—every one of us!—heard Rose Red laugh last night.
Laugh at me. At us. It was the most frightening sound I’ve ever
heard.
If there is a game to this, she has clearly won. They are all
gone. My loved ones. I am alone. Alone in my thoughts, alone in
my silence, alone in this house.
I shall ?re the entire staff (before she gets another of them!).
I shall dwell in this place alone for a time. Let her suffer. Let
her fail. Perhaps then we can strike a bargain, this house and me.
Perhaps then she’ll allow me to visit Sukeena as I do April. My
husband taught me well: everything is negotiable.
250
editor’s note: bookkeeping records substantiate
ellen rimbauer’s claim of FIring the thirty-four
staff members for a period of four months. during
that time it is believed she lived in rose red completely
alone and without a single visitor. whatever
her mental state going into this solitude, she
came out the worse for wear. over the subsequent
two months, she reinstated a staff of twenty. she
threw parties. at the last, 1946’s annual inaugural
ball, one of that period’s greatest FIlm actresses,
deanna petrie, disappeared in rose red (there are
unconFIrmed rumors that her friendship with ellen
went beyond the norm). this was the last great
party thrown in rose red. the staff was reduced to
FIfteen at the start of the u.s. involvement in
world war ii. by 1950 ellen rimbauer had disappeared.
in 1950, as she was approaching the age of seventy, a
nearly blind ellen rimbauer is said to have entered
the perspective hallway never to return. staff
there claim to have since heard sawing and hammering
in the attic.
at the time of her death, ellen rimbauer, once
the most beautiful and envied woman in seattle’s
high society, was a wizened old lady, feverish, half
blind and slightly mad. it is said that from time to
time rose red can be heard laughing or crying—that
the sound carries for miles and is often mistaken
for either a wild animal or a ship’s horn.
251
252
• • •
soon i shall venture inside rose red, armed with
sophisticated detection equipment; steven rimbauer,
a descendant of ellen and john rimbauer;
and some of the most powerful “perceptionists”—
psychics—in this part of the country. we hope to
awaken the “soul” of this enormous structure, the
being that lies within the walls, and to open communication
with either april, sukeena, ellen or
rose red herself. it is this last option that i fear
most of all. this diary conFIrms a formidable presence.
as always in the study of psychic phenomena,
one accepts a certain amount of the unknown, the
uncharted. spin a globe, open a door and who
knows what may happen? we shall see. life is an
adventure. rose red offers the research opportunity