Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
and occupied us both until the sun skimmed the horizon. He is
quite the spectacular lover, my husband, and I must say it was
time we came together as husband and wife once again. I know
that he harbors certain reservations about my womanhood, well
aware of the suffering I underwent at childbirth, and since then
he seems to ?nd it even a bit repulsive to think of touching me as
a husband touches a wife, but the brandy apparently did the trick.
He showed no reservation last night, and I returned a great deal
of enthusiasm for the rite so that I might indicate my own satisfaction
with his decision to visit my bed. Hopefully another four
months will not pass before he elects to do so again. I will admit
here to your pages that I am ready this instant. Just the thought of
John’s embrace ?lls me with ardor. (I detest myself for succumbing
to this power he lords over me. After all his transgressions,
and there I lie in my bed hoping—dare I say it? trembling!—to
hear his knock at my door! What kind of sickness accounts for
such behavior in a woman? I dare not broach the subject with my
friends, although Tina would be safe now that she knows so
much!)
Our party was perfect. Following that, our time in my chambers
was perfect. I wonder if things are on track again. I wonder if
whatever force brought tragedy into this home is suddenly gone.
Perhaps Rose Red is a house, a building, and nothing more.
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There is nothing to be afraid of. I repeat this phrase in my prayers
and yet do not fully believe the words, the memory of Laura’s
ghost lingers so boldly in my imagination.
I want so badly to believe: Nothing to be afraid of. If only I could!
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10 july 1910—rose red
John’s partner in Omicron Oil, Douglas Posey, and his wife,
Phillis, attended dinner to-night. We hosted six other guests, but
they were inconsequential to the telling of this story. Our guests
were invited, in part, to help us celebrate the amending of the
state constitution in support of the suffrage movement. This
week, Washington became the ?rst state in the land to allow
women the right to vote. It has been a hard-fought campaign, led
by many of my friends on the hospital board, and John has
brought out the champagne to lift our spirits! We dressed the
table in American ?ags and will eat off red plates (from the Far
East) set on blue linen, with white napkins. It’s all very festive!
I sensed tension between John and Douglas from the moment the
Poseys arrived. (Douglas has purchased a splendid new motorcar
that I know incites some envy on John’s part.) Within moments
of the arrival, John took Douglas rather forcibly by the arm and
escorted him into the Gun Room off the Central Hall West. I
heard raised voices—as did all the guests. The Gun Room is a small,
masculine space, wood-paneled with long glass displays containing
John’s collection of ri?es. They started in the Gun Room,
but within minutes their voices were coming from the Smoking
Room. One passes through a stair landing to reach the Smoking
Room from the Gun Room, and John must have taken Douglas
by this route, or Phillis and I would have seen them pass through
the Parlor. Our other guests were being served smoked salmon,
Wisconsin cheese and drinks in the Tapestry Gallery. Phillis, as it
turned out, wanted my ear as badly as John wanted his partner’s.
I believed the tension between Douglas and John arose from a
European contract that John had approved but Douglas had tied
up in legal negotiations. Spain, it might have been. By delaying
the contracts, another ?rm—Standard Oil, of all companies!—
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had negotiated a separate deal, essentially reducing Omicron’s
share of that market from eighty percent to less than ?ve, and
costing John and the company tens of thousands a year. It is
funny how you can be so sure of something only to ?nd out how
wrong you are. I could not have been more wrong about the cause
of their squabble. Yes, Douglas Posey had delayed the contracts;
yes, it had cost John plenty; but the source of their disagreement
was to come out in my secret and heated meeting with Phillis,
Douglas’s distraught wife.
She is a wife in name only, being some ?fteen years her husband’s
senior. (In some ways they, as a couple, are a direct opposite
of John and me. While Phillis has the business acumen,
Douglas is the socialite. Phillis, previously married and the
mother of ?ve grown adults, knows the ways of the world. Douglas
is new to marriage and parenthood, just as I am. Beyond that, all
comparison stops.)
Phillis is a homely woman, wide of girth, deep of voice. Her
black dress could have ?t me twice over. She is in the habit of
cupping her hand behind her left ear when one speaks to her on
this side, the result of a childhood injury when a young boy struck
her with a snowball that proved more ice than snow. She smelled
too strongly of perfume, and though a pleasant enough perfume,
I’m sure, it played bitter in her company—tangy and sharp on the
back of the throat. (She would have done better without it.)
“I am vexed,” she said, a big gush of wind as from a bellows.
“And I have no one to speak with, excepting you, dear child, for I
do believe we are quite good friends.”
I hardly knew the woman at all. This told me quite a bit about
her social skills. Her husband was the one with the smooth tongue.
She should have been business partner with my John. If society
had allowed it, John might have considered this possibility.
“What is it?” I asked, somewhat anxious to get back to my
guests in the Tapestry Gallery.
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“Did John tell you? Oh, my, I can see he did not . . .” She is
a bit frightening when worked up—I think it’s her size. “John . . .
It’s Douglas, you see. Perhaps my fault, when you get right down
to it.” She looked at me, blushed and looked away. “Oh, dear.”
Agitated to be kept from my guests, I was more forward than I
might have otherwise been. “If there’s nothing to discuss . . .”
“Oh, but there is!” She produced a handkerchief from inside
her sleeve. Dabbing her eyes, although I saw no tears, she continued,
“It’s our ages, I’m sure.”
“You’re a young woman, Phillis,” I said as kindly as possible.
She looks a bit homely.
“Boarding school, when you get right down to it.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Douglas . . . well . . . you see. He’s always preferred the
boys’ locker room to the girls’—if you follow me, dear.”
I did follow her. I hope I didn’t turn too grave a shade of red.
There had been talk. This was the ?rst Phillis had ever mentioned
it.
She said, “It was a young man in the company.” John,
Douglas, everyone associated with Omicron calls it “the company.”
“An accountant,” she said. “A bookkeeper.” She lowered
her voice to where even I, as close as I was, could barely hear her.
“John walked in on them, you see? Compromised, as they were.
Douglas’s of?ce, of all places.” She adjusted to her confession
rather quickly, suddenly quite herself again. “I’ve known since
before we were married. He was quite up front about it, dear
man. Needed a wife to make the social circles, to be your husband’s
partner. I ?t the bill quite nicely, despite the years I have
on him. For my part, I don’t ask much. I take a young man myself
every now and again.” She winked, and I found myself about to
laugh. The idea of this woman with anyone was laughable. “An
experienced woman knows to marry for position. One’s more
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physical desires are quite manageable outside the con?nes of that
agreement.”
Was this how my own husband felt about it? Was our marriage
made to suit the situation, while his appetites were another matter
entirely? I did not share this attitude with my robust friend, but I
kept thoughts on the matter to myself. “Go on,” I said.
“Well, it’s just that. John caught him. Them! This very day.”
It explained John’s foul mood. Usually, on the advent of a
dinner party, he is quite entertaining and enjoyable company.
To-night he had been snarly and gruff.
“I do believe he has a mind to punish my Douglas,” she said,
her jowls quivering. “And what I’ve come to say to you . . . to ask
you . . . to explain . . . is that Douglas is quite helpless in all of
this. It’s a bit like me and the gardener,” she said with another of
those disturbing winks. “I hope John isn’t too hard on him . . .
in terms of the business, Ellen. Douglas works so very hard.”
“To let him go?” I blurted out.
“They’re partners. He cannot ?re him!” she protested. “Not
for walking the other side of the street.”
I can tell you this, Dear Diary, my mother and her friends
would have never discussed such things. Not ever. Not even
cousins would discuss such transgressions. A man taking a boy was
nothing new—except when he walked in your front door. They
were stories, is all. Your friends did not do such things. But having
had my own devilish temptations with the dark-skinned
chambermaid, I knew that such lusts surfaced. I knew that fervent
prayer was the only lasting answer. (I knew that I still secretly
looked at Sukeena in ways and at times that were more appropriate
for a man.)
When Phillis laughed at her own jokes, she looked pitiful. I
reached out and held her hand. I assured her I would talk to
John.
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“You are a dear.”
“But I warn you, John’s his own man.” I doubted this was news
to Phillis Posey. “Especially when it comes to business. And as to
this other matter . . . the accountant. I rather suspect John will
be more upset that it involved an employee, and that it was . . .
that they were in the of?ce . . . and all.” I didn’t need these
images in my head. “More that than whatever choices Douglas has
made.”
“But it isn’t a choice. Not for Dougie, it isn’t. He’s been this
way since he was a young boy. He took to swimming, diving . . .
The suits, you see?” she said, as if this explained anything. I did
not want to think about it. “All that bare skin.” I assumed her
amusement stemmed from anxiety, from her nervousness about
approaching the subject, for she dealt with this problem of her
husband’s in a most unusual way.
For me, the conversation was far more revealing of my own
situation than that of Douglas Posey. I could not in?uence John
in this matter, nor would I try to do so. John is outspoken about
homosexuals and has told me so often. He seems less troubled
with women ?nding mutual romance than men. He has expressed
openly to me the “indecency of one man touching another in any
such intimate manner.” This, from a man who installs hidden
mirrors in the lady-servants’ quarters. I can just imagine him
lustily looking on as one girl soaps the back of another!
But Phillis’s explanation of their marriage of convenience
re?ected foully on my mood. Had I, in fact, been viewed as nothing
but a brood mare—a fear that had lingered in my heart for far
too long already? Had John justi?ed his unfaithfulness by qualifying
our marriage as one of convenience: good family, good
pedigree, breed her and keep her on to raise the children while
he takes to the streets to satisfy his more pressing needs? Disgust
welled in my heart, a bitter taste at the back of my throat.
I spent the dinner as something less than a gracious hostess, as
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preoccupied by these new concerns. I drank a little too much
wine.
John and Douglas Posey had emerged from the Smoking
Room with their contempt barely disguised. I don’t believe they
shared another word all evening—not even so much as a handshake
good-bye. I retired to my room where Sukeena helped me
get ready for bed, and I nursed dear Adam. (I think he may walk
any day! He crawls—he’s fast as lightning—and pulls himself up
and looks at me with the sweetest face as if to say, “Do I dare,
Mama?” Sukeena and I encourage him: if there’s one thing a
Rimbauer needs, it’s independence and strength!)
The air was still, the night terribly hot. I lay naked on my bed,
debating whether to wear a nightgown on such a sti?ing night.
(The night nurse had returned Adam to his room.) Sukeena had
gone to my dressing room to put away my silk hosiery and the
black heels I’d worn to dinner. I felt the wine as a penetrating
heat.
John knocked and opened the door before I answered, and he
saw me exposed there on the bed. It is odd, but rarely does John
see me without my clothes. On those nights he comes to my bed,
it is already dark as he slips in beside me. During our honeymoon
he afforded me privacy, believing me modest, I suppose (and
indeed I did blush quite a bit in those ?rst few days with my husband).
But last night he threw open the door and saw me there,
fully exposed as I was, and something came over him. He has
rarely shown me the level of interest as he did in the moments