Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
with caution along with a great deal of excitement, I do
confess. This was not “the place” for a woman, and just the fact
that I was here ?lled me with a degree of thrill impossible to fully
explain in these pages. (There was quiet talk among the women of
my class that a woman’s “time” was coming. I think now, here in
this place, for the ?rst time I fully understood that certain
boundaries were soon to be crossed. In fact, I felt something like
a pioneer just coming here.)
We ventured up a ?ight of complaining stairs, ensconced in a
narrow tunnel of wood, completely unlighted, to a stark reception
room where the formidable Madame Lu occupied a wicker
chair as fully as a hand occupies a glove. She was easily the size of
three or four women, an enormous edi?ce of ?esh and silk with
two ebony hairpins containing a curtain of rich black hair that
might have reached the ?oor unbridled. She had a series of chins
that cascaded down to the upper seam of the red silk gown, and
pudgy hands that appeared bloated and in?exible. Her voice was
that of a man’s, deep, resonant and ?lled with ?uid. Her words
bubbled from her throat.
“Please, sit.” She indicated the ?oor, covered only by a woven
mat.
I glanced at Tina, my astonishment clearly showing. She simply
smiled back at me, folded her legs and slowly lowered herself,
with the help of her maid. (Now I understood her insistence that
I bring Sukeena along!) Sukeena helped me to the ?oor—honestly,
I do not believe I have sat upon a ?oor since a toddler!—and
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then our two maids stepped to the side and stood alongside two of
Madame Lu’s keepers, thin young women who were not yet fully
developed.
“You welcome here again, Miss Tina. You bring friend.”
“It is for my friend that I come, Great Lady.”
“Indeed.”
Those beady black eyes surveyed me and I felt a heat pulse
through me as if she had reached into me with her fat hot hands.
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I felt her robbing my secrets, as if she had opened these pages and
had begun to read.
Madame Lu commands a formidable presence. As the smell of
incense made me light-headed and, indeed, feeling somewhat
under her “spell,” she opened an old tin box from which she
removed a great handful of ivory white bones, all of them small
and glistening with the shine of having been handled a thousand
times. “What question you ask?” she inquired of me, in a voice
deep enough to be my husband’s.
“How many questions am I allowed?”
The big woman rolled her eyes and clearly consulted my dear
friend Tina with an insolent glance. Tina leaned over and whispered
that as a matter of etiquette, the Chinese will not directly
discuss business arrangements, and that Madame Lu charged for
each reading. I could ask as many questions as I wished, as long as
I understood each reading would cost me an additional ?fty
cents. I considered it a usurious amount of money, but agreed
nonetheless. “Very well,” I said to the Great Lady. I collected
myself, feeling somewhat indignant about my sitting on a mat on
a ?oor, and said something like, “Is Mrs. Fauxmanteur alive?
Unharmed?”
Madame Lu considered me for a long moment, steadied a
black enamel table in front of her and dropped the handful of
bones there. They sounded more like stones. She regarded the
unruly pile in the un?inching fashion of a dog inspecting the
unknown: a slight cocking of the head left to right. She nodded,
hummed to herself and dug through the small pile of artifacts.
Her voice resonated as she spoke. “Many forms to life. Yes? This
lady’s spirit lives. I deal in spirit. Yes? Her body? Maybe not live
as you think of living.”
I shuddered. Alive, but not alive? Were such things possible?
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To my Christian upbringing this reeked of paganism and sinful
talk—but I had crossed over long ago in my prayers. Only now was
the world around me catching up.
The big woman collected the bones in a greedy hand and
deposited them back into her tin box, one eye cautiously on me,
expecting another question. I awaited her.
“Something else?” she wondered.
I glanced over at Tina, not wanting her to hear my question
concerning Rose Red. Could I trust her? I decided I must. “Is
our home, our house, Rose Red, possessed of spirits?”
The question won Tina’s attention. She stared at me, but I
would not look over at her.
The ritual repeated itself. Her puffy, fat ?ngers reached into
the dull gray box and deposited a grip of bones to the shiny
enamel tabletop. Again, her index ?nger prodded through the
pile, mining it for information. Sukeena let me know with a sigh
that she clearly put no faith in our hostess.
Madame Lu said, “You are not alone in this house.”
“Spirits?” I gasped, suddenly very cold and shaken. Perhaps I
did not want the truth. Perhaps I was not ready for it.
“A presence,” Madame Lu answered. “This much I can tell
you.”
I did not wish to hear anything more. A presence. Why did
her con?rmation carry so much signi?cance with me? Why did I
feel so afraid and chilled to the bone? Worse, Sukeena was nodding
her agreement. A presence.
I wanted out of there. I wanted home. That is, until I realized
that home was Rose Red.
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1 april 1909—rose red
I pray with all my heart that someone is playing a practical joke on
John and me, as this is the day for such tomfoolery, but the
woman in me knows better, for we have seen this before, have we
not, Dear Diary? I feel nearly mad, delirious with worry.
Another woman has disappeared without a trace.
This time it is a maid by the name of Laura, a dear waif of a
woman, quite fetching in appearance, who works in our chambers
changing linens, housecleaning and seeing to the cleanliness of
our toilets and baths. A colored woman, light-skinned and so
radiant, she was one of Sukeena’s closer acquaintances on the
staff, rather a younger sister to my African queen.
When the “Regent”—a fellow named Thomas—informed John,
I thought my husband might faint, an unlikely event for such a
man as strong as he. “It’s Laura, sir,” Thomas told John as the
two of us were just sitting down to tea. (Don’t think I didn’t take
notice of the similarity in the time of day!)
“Laura?” John sputtered.
“Our chambermaid,” I gasped.
Believing I intended this for him, John snapped at me, “I
know who Laura is, Ellen. Hush!”
I felt like slapping him, I was so humiliated. Of course, he
knows who Laura is; John has had the last say in the hiring of all
the servants, and despite his claim that this domestic charge is my
responsibility, it most decidedly is not.
He bit his lip and chewed, thoughtfully immersed in some
devilish consideration (of this, I have little doubt given my
impression of his expression). It was then, for the ?rst time, that
I gave myself open to the possibility that this curse that af?icts us
might in some way be John’s doing, not mine at all. Perhaps it is
John’s prayers, not mine, that have reached the beyond. Perhaps,
all this time I have prayed to the other side, it has actually been
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my husband’s voice that has been heard. And if so, then to what
end was he praying? Certainly he could mean me no harm, not
before the birth—the possibility of an heir! Then what? I wondered.
And still, I have no answer, though evidence presents itself
to support my theory, for this disappearance has vexed my husband
greatly, far beyond the vanishing of Mrs. Fauxmanteur.
Upon the news of the disappearance, John and the Regent
gathered all thirty-three servants (Laura being the thirty-fourth!)
in the Grand Ballroom. A hush fell over all, because word travels
quickly in this house, believe me. (There is no privacy left to my
life—all is known.) The Regent and Sukeena, as John’s and my
personal representatives, stood forefront to the rows of attendants.
John addressed all in a forceful, dare I say, frightened,
tenor.
“I must inquire as to the whereabouts of our own Laura
Hirtson, master’s chambermaid, in service to Mrs. Watson.
Anyone with information about Miss Hirtson, please step forward
now.”
Thomas is a big man possessing a commanding presence, and
with a voice that can carry through walls. Some of the girls were
already crying, though doing their best not to show it. To my surprise,
a man of eighteen or so, who goes by the name Rodney,
stepped forward from his line and replied meekly.
“Sir, if I may . . .”
“Rodney?”
The extent of John’s memory never ceases to amaze me. I do
believe he could recall each of the servants by name, perhaps even
recall their backgrounds, if required to do so. I know many, but
not all.
“I saw Laura late this morning in the Solarium. I am not certain,
but I believe she was headed out toward the Carriage
House.”
John pursed his lips, looked directly at Daniel, the master of
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the Carriage House, and the two exchanged a powerful look. I felt
for a moment as if a wind swept through the room. “Is that so?”
John paused. “Daniel?”
“I never laid eyes on her, sir, and I haven’t left the Carriage
House all morning until this meeting here just now.”
Daniel and John go back years, Daniel having cared for John’s
horse?esh for nearly two decades. I knew, having no need to ask,
that John trusted Daniel’s opinion absolutely.
“The Solarium,” John repeated to Rodney.
“Yes, sir. And if I may say so, sir, her being there . . . she
seemed a bit . . . suspicious, like. Surprised to see me, you might
say. Went about an explanation right off the mark, as if I’d asked.
And I hadn’t! But that’s Laura, isn’t it? Likes to wag her jaw, that
one.”
A few of the men nearby Rodney chuckled over the man’s
deliberate delivery. John saw no reason for levity and squared his
shoulders, sobering the entire staff.
“Anyone else?”
No one stepped forward.
I raised my voice from the side. “It’s rather important, to say
the least. Please, if any of you at all has seen her.” I caught an
expression in Linda’s face—Linda, who is assistant to Mrs. Danby,
and one of Laura’s dorm mates. I believe the two close, though I
have little to support that belief. Her eyes widened. I thought I
saw her hand lift, if not imperceptibly.
“Linda?” I asked.
“Yes, ma’am?” A tension in her voice.
“Were you to say something?”
A quick glance toward me and then John. “No, ma’am.”
“Just now, I thought—”
“No, ma’am.”
John put me back to silence with one scalding look. This was
his summons of the staff, not my own. He divided up the group
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and instructed them where to search. By his calculation, the
thirty-three staff could coordinate to conduct a thorough search
of premises—every closet, armoire, storage room, steamer trunk—
within an hour to an hour and a half. Two hours at most. (It was
there and then, seeing this army assembled before us, and realizing
this search would still account for a considerable amount of
time, that I came to grasp the enormity of this house that was still
under construction—a house that even I, the matron, had lost
track of. By way of example, there is a new wing of the third ?oor
open, completed and decorated over three weeks ago now, that I
have yet to see for the ?rst time.)
As the staff was dismissed and the search began, my dear John
showing a color of pale I had never witnessed, I endeavored to
locate Sukeena and to request she in turn ?nd Linda and bring
her to me in my chambers.
“But the search, ma’am,” Sukeena said in her Kenyan
singsong, her eyes wide with apprehension. She sounds British at
times. “Mister John.”
“Never mind John,” I instructed. “I wish to talk with Linda
immediately.”
“Very well, ma’am,” Sukeena replied, her determination to
follow my request apparent. One of Sukeena’s many wonderful
attributes is her ability to remain calm and consistent. Regardless
of generation, Africans are quite gifted in this regard, able to
leave the past behind—an argument, disagreement or other dif?-
culty—without the slightest timidity, as if it had never occurred.
(Despite Mr. Lincoln’s intentions, and that awful Civil War
through which our parents lived, and many fought, I do not
believe the slaves—nearly all of them African by descent—have
been provided the opportunity to advance socially as once
claimed. Indeed, I believe that history will record Mr. Lincoln’s
attitudes a result of political pressures rather than philanthropic
intention. The freemen seem rarely better off, often unem-
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ployed, forbidden to buy land and disassociated with regions
where they lived for generations. There is private talk among the
women of this city who speak of suffrage that the Negro has as
much, if not more, claim to ?ght for personal freedoms than