Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
when I felt quite well.
Particularly vexing is that had any of those under our employ
encountered Mr. Posey, he or she is not in the position to report
it. John has long had installed in this house a strict rule of con?-
dentiality, as he carries on secret business meetings (or at least
that’s the reason he gives!) and can’t have word getting out. (He
is, in fact, said to be investing in an aero company with his good
friend Bill Boeing. I think it’s a waste of money, personally, but
John says aeroplanes will be important to the military.) So had
any of the servants seen or encountered Douglas Posey, they
would not have mentioned it anyway. They would be loath to do
so. Whether anyone did see Douglas as he entered remains
unclear. We all saw him leave.
It is no easy feat to reach the Parlor undetected, especially from
where Douglas Posey began his surreptitious entrance into our
grand home. He understood the house well enough, and its
internal politics, to increase his chances. The Parlor’s window
looks out on the U-shaped pebble driveway, the Fountain
Garden, which offers a welcoming splash of color year-round,
thanks to our busy staff. He has been to the second ?oor plenty of
times himself, to partake in one or another of John’s many secret
business meetings, and even knows several of the staff by name.
One can only imagine why a person would go to such lengths as
did Douglas Posey, but if there is one thing I have learned from
my time in the company of John Rimbauer, it is that there is no
predicting the human condition. The man Freud can make all
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the claims he wants (he is said to attribute nearly every phobia and
fear to the physical intimacies between man and woman—sex!—
disregarding in the process the drive for sustenance, survival and
power). I trust someday his ?ndings will be disproved, despite
their apparent accuracy where my husband is concerned. What I
will never understand, since I once imagined Douglas took a keen
liking to the children, is why and how he chose the Parlor, knowing
how fond Adam is of playing there. Perhaps his decision
stemmed from the presence there of an oil portrait of John that
hangs over the ?replace. My portrait hangs in the Entry Hall,
along with John’s game trophies—the similarity of our situations
has not escaped me. These portraits were commissioned while we
were in London at the end of our honeymoon, and I must say
they seem lifelike, the work skillful though unimaginative.
Indeed, John’s portrait—looking so digni?ed—hangs with a view
across the Parlor and out an opposing window toward the drive,
as if surveying his domain and contemplating his dominion over
same.
I can scarcely write the words, and without the high spirits that
?ll my glass would feel helpless to do so, but the story must be
told, and so, what I have been told of it follows.
Adam was the ?rst to enter the Parlor, on one of his “safaris”
where he encourages his sister, April, to forage ahead of him in
the great hallways and make like game, as Adam attempts to track
her. (Little does poor Adam see or understand the signi?cance of
this practice to Sukeena and me—like his father, the game he
stalks is a young girl! He must wonder why we discourage it so.)
He had missed a cue and lost April as she dodged into the
Smoking Room—a room she is forbidden to enter, but girls will
be girls. Adam swung open the door, his popgun held at shoulder
height and ready to “?re,” and apparently looked down that ri?e
barrel at Douglas Posey, who was himself halfway up a small
wooden stepladder that is kept in a closet off the gallery to assist
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in the positioning and hanging of the artwork. Around the man’s
neck was a length of hemp rope fashioned as a noose. He stared at
young Adam, the boy’s physical similarity to his father impossible
to miss.
A moment later, dear April with her withered arm clutched
tightly to her spare frame ran in behind her brother, in anticipation
of surprising him and winning their little game. She too was
confronted with the sight of John’s former partner up that ladder.
Douglas Posey tossed his hat to the boy (for he had come to
our house dressed head-to-toe as a cowboy!). Then he saw the
girl and made a gesture toward her as well. Through the air
?oated a long-stemmed red rose. (Douglas is very much aware of
the nickname of our grand house.) April’s one good hand swiped
the air and stole the rose from its descent, the thorns tearing her
?esh and eliciting from her a sharp cry of pain.
Douglas Posey stepped off the ladder and bounced in the air,
his eyes never leaving my little girl until they bulged from his ?orid
head, a blue pallor overcoming him. Adam claims he heard a loud
snap, like a limb succumbing to the wind of a northwesterly blow.
He pulled the trigger of his popgun and its cork ?ew through the
air and struck Douglas square in the chest, for Adam is a crack
shot like his father before him. Adam said Douglas “danced,” his
legs “jumping like when the Negros do the tap at their parties.”
His tongue sprang from his mouth, a swollen stiff mass, which
was when both children screamed at the top of their lungs.
April was found with her hand bleeding slightly, the rose still
clutched ?rmly in her grip. Her eyes had never left the body.
Adam was called back from his hands and knees where he tried
unsuccessfully to retrieve his cork from just beneath the body,
fearing he had somehow killed Douglas himself and not wanting
anyone to ?nd the evidence.
Across the Parlor from where Douglas swung from the hemp,
his distorted eyeballs nearly bursting from their sockets, he stared
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(if the word is appropriate here) at the life-sized portrait of his
former partner, my husband, who, it just so happens (and some
say that Douglas surely knew this), was at that very moment
pulling into the driveway and up to the house returning home.
From his vantage point in his motorcar, John saw Douglas
Posey, his stated enemy, swinging from his neck in the large
expanse of window that ?lls the center of the Parlor. Douglas
offered him only his backside, stained as it was with life’s ?nal
excretion.
I think every servant on the property heard April’s scream.
She hasn’t spoken a word since.
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26 february 1915—rose red
For the last week I have devoted every waking hour to my children,
dividing my energies between Adam and April, though
spending far more of my time with my daughter. I do not know
how the male mind works, but suf?ce it to say Adam’s recovery
seemed almost immediate. Whether there will be longer-lasting
effects of his witnessing the suicide I do not know, and I do confess
to these pages that I am fearful Douglas Posey’s death will
linger within him and surface for some time to come. Little April
is another matter altogether. Neither John nor I, nor the governesses,
nor Sukeena, can get her to utter a single word. She sits,
for endless hours at a time, staring at the architect’s model of
Rose Red. She dragged it in front of the ?replace in the Parlor
and there she sits. She screams wildly if anyone attempts to move
it, or her, for that matter. The staff has been directed to work
around her, to leave her alone, and not to address her unless
instructed, for her outbursts are paralyzing. I am apparently the
only one she will tolerate even near her. So, mother and child
occupy the Parlor, the hissing of the logs, the sharp popping of
the pine sap combusting the only sounds. I have taken to knitting,
for I ?nd reading impossible in this state. In truth, I stare at my
daughter’s back, awaiting some sign of a return to normal. Twice
I have lost my temper, though not for several days now, ?nding
her silence insolent and enormously frustrating. I also, for a
time, felt her prisoner, as if she had concocted this state of hers,
taking advantage of the poor man’s suicide as a means of capturing
me into her web. I have spent more time with her in this week
than in the previous six months combined. (I fear this re?ects on
me poorly when viewed in the written word, but one must be
reminded of my own in?rmity.)
I have secretly ordered Abigail, one of the children’s understudy
nannies, to photograph the Rose Red model each night
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before retiring to bed. This, on account of my troubling impression
that it is subtly changing in appearance. I could swear that
wings appear and disappear from one day to the next, and that
the degree of these changes directly re?ects the amount of time
April sits staring. (I fear, Dear Diary, that she is, in fact, not
“staring” so much as “sharing” herself with the model, with Rose
Red. As absurd as this sounds, I tell you it is true: she enters a
kind of trance in the company of that model and does not come
out until the ?re dies and the room goes cold.)
This leads me to another entry here in your pages that I have
resisted putting to ink for several nights now. It is time, for I fear
the results if I keep such things locked inside me:
My dear Sukeena came to me the other night with a look of
pure fright on her deep blue face. I inquired immediately what
was ever the matter, and she would not speak to me until we
found ourselves sequestered in my chambers, with the door fully
bolted. Our conversation went something like this:
“Sukeena! What is it?”
“It’s her, Miss Ellen.”
“April?”
“The house. Her! Rose Red.”
I awaited her, expecting to hear more. When she was not
forthcoming, I prodded her, compelling her to speak. She
appeared spooked—there is no other word for it. “Please,” I
?nally obliged her.
“Maybe not the Indians,” she said.
“What is not the Indians?” I asked.
“Me thinking, miss. Me listening. Listening to April, miss.”
“But April has not spoken for nearly a week.”
“Not to us, miss.”
“Sukeena?”
“It like a wind, miss. A wind all ’round that child. A wind like
a voice . . . like many voices. Whenever she ’round that toy . . .
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that Rose Red dollhouse. It why she no want me near. She knows I
hear.”
“What are you saying?” I felt exasperated. “My daughter is . . .
is, what? . . . speaking to this house?”
“The house speaks to her, miss. Me think maybe not the
Indians.”
“You’re speaking of the disappearances.”
She nodded, still afraid. It is not often I have seen her afraid.
Not Sukeena.
“What if . . . miss. If you think of it as ?re. Fire, miss. Fire
on our insides, Miss Ellen. Like that.”
“Life?” I gasped.
“The power of life, miss. Yes. The ?re. And what if . . . what
if the house needs this ?re for itself ? The way you and me need
our food. Like that. Fire, like that.”
“Not Indians.”
“No, miss.”
“Not the burial ground.”
“Not saying the Indians aren’t here as well, miss. This place
feels crowded at times.”
She was right about that. We’d all felt it. Even the servants. We
weren’t alone in this house. The occasional, unexplained Indian
artifact surfacing in our collection seemed to support this spectral
presence.
“Are you saying . . . ?” I found myself grinning nervously. I
felt terribly uncomfortable. I did not want to express what I was
thinking, but we had come too far for such reservations. No walls
exist between Sukeena and me. “Are you saying the disappearances
. . . ?” She nodded, knowing exactly where I was taking us.
“That Rose Red is feeding on these disappearances?”
“Sucking the ?re out of them, miss.” She nodded solemnly.
I sputtered a little laugh, not at all comfortable now.
She said ominously, “I think it has to do with you, miss. No
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question about that. This house loves you. But I think it takes
them others for the ?re that’s inside them. It living off that ?re,
Miss Ellen.” She added, “And the bigger she gets, the more she
need to eat.”
I shuddered. “But we’re building her bigger,” I reminded her,
willful of Madame Stravinski’s decree.
“Maybe that woman,” Sukeena said, meaning Madame
Stravinski, “she working for the house. Maybe that was the house
talking, not her.”
“I don’t believe that,” I whispered. Construction on the house
is scheduled years ahead. “As long as I keep building . . .” I did
not say it, but I was thinking: then I’m immortal! What I did say was,
“I trust Madame Stravinski and what she told us about Rose Red.”
I added, “My fevers are gone.”
Sukeena knows me well enough to leave it at that. I suppose I
should not have been so heavy-handed as I was, for I fear I put to
an end any further discussion on the subject. Sukeena rarely
glares at me, but on this occasion she did just that: a wide-eyed
leer of contained anger. I attempted to begin again.
I asked, “It’s living off the life of the girls that have disappeared?”