Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
if not outward respect.
“So this is child,” Madame Lu said.
“April,” I said.
“Pretty name. Pretty child.”
“We . . . I—”
She cut me off. “Come here, child. Sit with Lu.” She
extended her pudgy, swollen hands behind stiff arms that looked
like tubular balloons knotted at the elbow. To my complete surprise,
my daughter stood, walked the distance and scooted up into
the large woman’s lap. For a moment, she seemed to get lost in
the Great Lady’s garment, like stepping behind a curtain and
then peering out again. I smiled at her. Then my heart stopped:
my daughter smiled back at me. It was the ?rst such expression
since Douglas Posey’s suicide, and it brought tears to this
mother’s eyes. (I am softened by the simplest gifts!)
The bearing of the Great Lady was formidable. She seemed to
?ll the entire room all of a sudden. The ?ames of the candles in
the room (and I swear this is true!) all bent toward that throne as
if victims of a dozen simultaneous winds, as if water were running
past them and down a drain directly beneath the Great Lady’s lacquered
chair. The room ?lled with added light, and for a
moment my heart danced in my chest, and I thought I might be
faint. She said, “Mother tell me child, that you seen a man take
his life.” No beating around the bush for Madame Lu—this was
the ?rst that anyone, to my knowledge, had spoken so openly
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about Douglas’s tragedy, and I feared repercussions. Again to my
surprise, April nodded. “Madame Lu understand you no talk
since this day. You hold your tongue. Madame Lu think smart
child. Good girl, little April.” April looked up at the woman’s
swollen cheeks and beady, slit eyes. “You no talk because the
question not answered, isn’t that right?”
I bubbled out my surprise and began to sob as my precious little
girl nodded right along with the Great Lady—this was, by all
accounts, a conversation, and as such, nothing short of a miracle.
Lu said, “No one here answered the question for you, did
they, Child?”
April looked over at Sukeena and me and shook her head.
“Until question answered,” the Chinese woman continued,
“no sense in risking anything and ending up like that man—dead
as dead can be. Am I right?”
April nodded vigorously.
“Oh, yes. Oh, yes.”
The candle ?ames stood straight up again, the wind suddenly
lessened, or perhaps it was gone completely. I worried immediately
that Madame Lu had missed her opportunity, and my heart
sank like a stone. She read me from her chair and ?ashed me a
look that urged I reconsider, and I realized this woman was inside
me: she heard my every thought. I forced an awkward smile.
Lu asked, “Do you know the question, Mother?”
I shook my head no.
“You, Darkie?”
Sukeena remained impassive. I wasn’t sure where Sukeena was
at that moment—I had a feeling that she, too, was inside me, also
reading my thoughts. Perhaps protecting me, standing sentry at
my door. I struggled to stay conscious.
“The question,” Madame Lu said privately to April, “is where
did the man go? Isn’t it, Child?”
April looked shocked. I let out a yelp and again was repri-
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manded by the big woman’s glance. “If he were no longer, where
he gone? If still here, why he not talk?” She said quietly, and
calmly, “So you no talk.”
“Where did he go?” April said, speaking for the ?rst time
since the tragedy and causing me to sob with joy.
“To the other side, my child,” Madame Lu said, still calmly.
“You seen him there, yes? You talk, you and this man. Talk, with
no need to use mouth. He the one tell you no talk to others, yes,
Child?”
“He said they’d never understand.”
“Ohhhh,” I sobbed into my handkerchief, so overcome with
grief and joy that I failed to hear the rest of what was said. It was
over quickly, Madame Lu grinning, showing gaps where her teeth
were missing. April hopped off her lap, cheerful as a bug, and
scurried over to me. We hugged, and she must have thought me
queer for my display.
I waved over Sukeena and requested she complete the business
with Madame Lu—I would pay anything, offer anything she
requested. Sukeena promised to relay the message. April and I
descended the dark stairs, my sweet, loving child already telling
me all about the “awful man who jumped from the ladder.”
If ever I doubted the power of the other side, to-day this
mother’s heart was convinced. To-day, I became a convert.
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17 february 1917—rose red
For the last eighteen months, suspicious again about your role,
Dear Diary, in the strange and entangled events of this grand
house, I have kept thought and soul to myself, never sharing them
with your pages, no matter how great the temptation. No ghosts
to look over my shoulder, goes my reasoning, if nothing is being
put to paper. Alas, my plan has had little consequence. I sit down
here to write in an act of desperation (this is not one of Poe’s
gory inventions of ?ction: no young girl who can set schools
a?re; no dog that behaves as if possessed; no giant pendulum
swinging to cut one in half!). If there exists some wraith, some
bodily spirit here in this room with me, if he or she can hear my
thoughts as the wet ink travels from my pen to parchment, if in
fact said entity has any modicum of compassion still held in
reserve, then you—it!—must certainly heed a mother’s cry: my
sweet child has gone missing. Help me!
I offer anything in return if sign be shown to indicate such an
exchange. Money? My own soul? My life. My husband’s. “What’s
that?” I ask . . . a voice in reply? A wind? (It is at this point I
notice my east window has slipped open, and I fear the woman’s
voice I did detect was nothing more than nature’s idle callings
from the forest that surrounds these walls.) Nonetheless, Dear
Diary, I do speak again into the privacy of my room, after securing
this window shut and locked. “Did you speak to me? Is anyone
there?”
Again—and I swear this on my life—a rumbling grew from
beneath my trembling legs and swept through my ears like a whisper.
“Hello?” I call out.
Another window open! This time in my reading room, a
lovely place for meditation and study just off my bedroom chamber,
opposite the ?rst of my two dressing rooms. I hurry
through, about to shut it against the swirling wind and rain that
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engulf this awful tomb, when I think that perhaps this is how you
speak to me, Rose. A mother’s hysterical anguish? I ask myself.
Or is there reason behind this assumption? As your “voice” grows
stronger I can picture my sweet April in the bed behind me so
vividly, her golden curls thrown back against a pillow, her high
little voice whispering to me: “Whales don’t have noses.” Or is it
you? “Are you there?” I call out into my chambers. “Are you with
me, Rose?” Nothing comes back at me. No sign that I can take to
heart. No indication that my girl has only been borrowed, not
stolen instead.
I tremble, my head unstable. I swear I hear the words return:
“T . . . h . . . e d . . . o . . . w . . . e . . . r.” Though these
words make no sense to me, I am grateful for any sibilance, any
sustenance to what previously was discerned as only wind. “The
dowry?” I wonder, reminded of my marriage. “The dowager?”
“Help me, I pray.” I return again to the empty reading room,
my head spinning as I turn on my heels, a blur of the books’
leather bindings ?oor to ceiling, the stained-glass lamp I bought
in Venice, the carpet from Constantinople—all these and more I
would trade in a beat of the heart for even a sign that my child has
been spared, never mind what I would surrender for the child
herself—this mother’s life in an instant! Just give me a sign!
I stand now, the window thrown open to the storm, debating
throwing myself to the slate of the garden path below in sacri?ce.
All I await is the sign. Give me such a sign, and I am yours! A
?ash of lightning. A cry from the forest beyond.
I see instead the unsteady ?ickering of the policemen’s ?ashlights
as they patrol our woods, and wish it were a sign. I hear the
thundering voice of my husband, a world away, in the Entry Hall
below: “Find her! Find my child!” He is in a ?t of rage, ordering
staff and police alike (there are ?fty police here searching for my
April). I fear that like me, John, too, is making his prayers heard
to your spirits, Rose, making offerings for an exchange. How this
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parent’s heart breaks at the thought of any harm coming to my
April.
The main focus of the search began in the Kitchen, where
April was last seen playing tea—the enormous architect’s model of
the grand house just out of reach. Sukeena reports that the child
was playing by herself and seemed quite content at the time. (I
fear that John has directed his fears to Sukeena herself, for I am
told by Millicent that Sukeena has been sequestered in the staff
kitchen, where she is being questioned by the police. Try as I
might to intervene, to free her from this unfair suspicion, John
sent me to my chambers, and this is one time I dare not challenge
my husband, for his mood is aggressive and even frightening.)
April was left for a moment as Sukeena neatened the pantry (she
believes the pantry another of the house’s portals). When
Sukeena turned around April was gone. Oh, how my world is
turned upside down all of a sudden! (Indeed it has been quite
askew for some time, but only now do I admit to the full effects of
such behavior. I would never doubt Sukeena’s explanation of
events whatsoever. I trust my friend beyond any other.) She
explained also that at no time did April leave the Kitchen nor did
she call out. Nor was there any cause for alarm, nothing whatsoever
out of the ordinary. When next she looked the Kitchen stood
empty, only the tea set and that model, a grotesque representation
of our grand house, planted ?rmly in the center of the
kitchen table, the house’s wings and extensions growing from its
original form like some tumorous root. Not a lock of hair, not a
?ber of clothing. Just the empty room and, of course, Sukeena.
A moment later a scream: John claims it was Sukeena;
Sukeena says it was the house itself.
I stand at my window, eyeing it as my escape from this pain. I
never imagined a heart could endure such torture. I never
understood the depth of this great love, how encompassing, how
whole and complete. Dare I say it here? Yes, there were times I
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wished the children would go away. Yes, there were times I longed
for that simplicity of husband and wife in the cabin of the Ocean
Star with nothing but time between great lavish meals, the best
wines, and the intrigues of physical discoveries. But now! Just the
thought of such sel?shness is enough to make me sick! How gladly
I would recapture the slightest whisper of such wishes! How simple
that window looks to me. How effortless to end it here.
I drag the Louis XVI settee to rest before the window and
think to remove my shoes before stepping onto her pink and
green silk upholstery, my dress held high around my thighs, and I
awkwardly squeeze myself into the open frame, looking down
between my feet at the looming darkness. I teeter there, half in,
half out, whispering prayers repeatedly, the drumming of my
blood in my ears, as images of sweet April swirl and ?ll the void
in my chest where once my heart resided. Oh Wind, talk to me
now. Summon me now! Say but a single word—J . . . U . . .
M . . . P—and you shall own me forever, or what is left of it. I
can see beyond the slate rooftop of the Pool House, to the rising
wing I commissioned at the instruction of Madame Stravinski. I
would haul it all down in a second for the af?rmation of life in
my precious child. I shudder at the thought of immortality that
fails to include my children, fails to include those I love:
Sukeena, my mother and father. Who would wish for the curse of
the endless extension of a life without family, a life without love?
If Rose has taken my dear child, is it because I built too slowly, or
because I built at all? Is it because I have shared my bed with the
sweet child for nearly two years, or because I allowed my husband
to send the boy away to school? How much is a product of those
things I control, and how much those I do not?
Do I confess my sins now, from the pious mount of this open
window, the ?re?ies of ?ashlights blinking in the woods? “He is
unfaithful!” I shout from my pulpit. “I am unfaithful!” I hesitate.
I hear a voice. Rose Red? I wonder. I shout, “I live torn by lust,
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corrupted by a woman’s gentle, loving touch.” I want Sukeena to
hear this. I want her to understand. The guilt has been too much
to bear. Rose Red has punished us for what we’ve done in secret
these many months. She has taken my child to show me the ways