Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
was made to answer this inquiry myself. Believing it to be
Sukeena, who has found it dif?cult to sleep since her ordeal with
the police, I approached in my nightgown, not bothering with a
robe.
To my great surprise it was my husband. Further to my surprise
was his apparent sobriety. I had not seen him since before
218
tea, and had presumed him to be drinking quite heavily on this
day.
“Ellen,” he said, his voice barely a whisper, “the pain is too
great.” I admitted him and we embraced—hugged each other in a
way we have not done in years. I cried. My husband remained
stalwart, though was visibly shaken. As we hugged, his large hands
held me from behind, rubbing me and pressing me to him, and I
sensed immediately he had turned his grief into need—he wanted
physical soothing.
He kissed my neck, my throat, and I confess I shuddered with
apprehension. I, too, needed this expression of love, needed
some escape from my grief. He stopped my heart with his next
words. “Send for her.”
I stammered, unable to draw a breath. There was no question
to whom my husband referred. “John . . . ,” I pleaded, but he
pressed his ?nger to my lips and repeated himself, and I knew
there was to be no arguing.
I approached the door, preparing to summon one of my staff.
I turned to him again, one ?nal attempt to win favor. “John, dear
husband, I offer myself in whatever regard you do wish. You may
dress, undress me. Position me any way you like, ask anything of
me you so choose—but do not ask this. I have yet to inform her of
our . . . negotiations. I dare not tell her this way.”
Clearly, he considered my offer thoughtfully. He touched
me—touched me as only a husband may touch a wife. Then he
stopped abruptly and bid me to summon her. “Send for her,” he
repeated.
I knew better than to challenge him, especially in the face of
his rescue, which may have saved Sukeena’s life. “Very well,” I
said. “But leave my chambers for a time. Let me speak to her in
private. Grant me this favor, my only request. Return in thirty
minutes. You shall have what you wish.”
Sukeena arrived quite promptly—never one to dismiss a sum-
219
mons from her mistress. I sat her down and spoke quite plainly of
the arrangements I had made to secure her release from jail and
torture. I informed her of my discovering of John’s viewing hallway,
and how I believed he watched every woman in this house
from similar vantage points. I had no doubt whatsoever that he’d
visited Sukeena in this regard for several years now.
“You ask me to do this thing for you, ma’am, you know I do.”
“You loathe him, I know, sweet friend.”
“He bad man, Miss. Not bad in soul, but bad in action. Bad
for the children, bad for you, Miss Ellen.”
“We must do this thing,” I bid her. “We must grant him this
whenever he asks, and he has asked for to-night to help rid him
of the haunting that results from the loss of sweet April.”
“You ask me do dis, I do dis.”
I kissed her, kissed her on the lips long and tenderly. “I had
hoped nothing might ever spoil our privacy, dear friend.” Her
eyes burned into mine and I felt her displeasure with me—perhaps
she would rather have died in jail than take to bed with my
husband. I didn’t blame her for this.
“This one night, he never forget,” she said. “Sukeena make
sure of that.”
“It’s a night none of us shall forget,” I said.
“Oh, no,” she contradicted. “Me, ma’am? I forget this before
I return to my own room.” And she smiled.
When Sukeena smiled—missing teeth and all—the whole room
grew brighter. She slipped out of her robe and nightdress and
stood before me naked, a powerful and wildly attractive female
form. “Take off the nightie, miss.” She stepped forward and
helped me out of my nightgown. “You say he coming,” she said.
“Then we give him an eyeful.” With that, she took my hand and
led me toward my bed.
220
editor’s note: as arbiter of these entries, after
much discussion with my publisher, it was decided
that the speciFIc references (1 april 1917) were far
too graphic and disturbing to be printed here,
where readers more interested in the history of
rose red should not be made to be burdened with
the personal exploits (and exploitation!) of the
author. we have, as a concession, made this, and (a
few) other excerpts available on the world wide
web at the following address: www.beaumontuniversity.
net. users familiar with the web will note
there is no “link” to these excerpts from any of the
web-published pages. you must therefore type in the
url given here (exactly as it is written) in order to
reach this private library of ellen’s most personal
moments. a further warning: some of the content
therein is explicitly sexual, and is not intended for
persons under the age of eighteen.
in point of fact, ellen rimbauer apparently
became obsessed with recounting her nearly
nightly bedroom activities over the next several
months, writing almost exclusively about her husband’s
increased addiction to these events and the
elaborate acts he conceived for both his wife and
his wife’s best friend and servant. there are virtually
no entries other than these (often repugnant
and degrading) until early in 1918, an editorial
time jump i readily make in order to spare you, the
reader, the sordid descriptions of the debauchery
to which john rimbauer stooped. the only element
you lose because of my red pencil is the growing
frustration on the part of ellen and sukeena at
221
222
being used in this way, to have what was once a pure
love between them corrupted and poisoned by a man
who could no longer FInd any satisfaction in life.
even physical pleasure now robbed him of any victory
over the senses. he was consumed in grief, he
felt himself a failure, and the deeper he sank, the
more bizarre his requests, the more desperate the
two women become. (there is even an account of a
late night spent in the barn!) by the time we join
back up with ellen in the pages to come, there have
been hints of a conspiracy FIrst forming, and then
growing, between the mistress of the house and her
maid. ellen will not allow the speciFIcs of this conspiracy
to reach her pages, for fear of her diary’s
discovery, but it is quite evident that john rimbauer
is the target and that plans have already
formed to set into motion john rimbauer’s demise.
—joyce reardon
223
9 march 1918—rose red
To look back at the entries herein, it is quite obvious to me how
nothing has affected me quite so much as the late-night encounters
with John and the disturbing nature of his demands upon the
women of this house. The events of this day ?nally are cause for
re?ection on the larger nature of the problems with Rose Red
and her apparent need of “fuel,” both in terms of her physical
expansion (her continued construction) and whatever spiritual
needs she has.
To-day, she killed again.
The coroner will put the death of George Meader down as an
allergic reaction to a bee sting. But that bee sting came inside the
Health Room [Editor’s note: Health Room = Ellen’s term for the
Solarium, post 1917] and that room did burst with color upon his
death, the same way it exploded with color on the tragic night of
April’s disappearance and Sukeena’s confrontation with the
policeman there.
Meader, a railroad executive who has stayed the week with us,
was a big drinker, and clearly a womanizer. He ?irted with many
of the staff and may have had relations with more than one. It was
the attention he paid poor Sukeena that may have led to his
untimely demise. More than once he cornered her. (For she tells
me everything that happens in this house.) More than once he
attempted to grope her. (Who knows if John had a part in any of
this? I cannot see John sharing stories of our “alliance,” our
triad, but I put little past the man.) For her part, Sukeena ?nally
arranged for George to meet her in the Health Room at the
stroke of midnight.
George appeared, quite drunk, but on time. Alerted to
Sukeena’s plans, I kept watch of the Health Room from above,
alert to any lights coming on in various hallways or the Kitchen.
224
If I saw any such activity, I was to switch the lights of my room
repeatedly. Sukeena would be able to see my chamber’s windows
from inside the Health Room.
All went according to plan.
George showed up in the Health Room, and Sukeena immediately
began dancing in a most ?uid, provocative and suggestive
manner. Even distanced as I was, I felt the power of that dance.
No man could fail to respond to those hips, the loose-jointed
nature of her body as it expressed itself. I could see George
Meader reach for his collar (for the Health Room is considerably
warmer than the rest of the house, even without Sukeena dancing)
and attempt to unbutton it. He slipped off his coat—perhaps
at Sukeena’s instruction. Only moments after he had removed his
coat, Sukeena sank to the ?oor, her legs crossed, and apparently
set her mind to prayer, or whatever it is she does exactly. Barely
seconds passed before I saw George Meader swat his arm—the bee
had stung him, summoned, I remain convinced, by Sukeena’s
substantial meditative powers. Sukeena waited only brie?y for
George to sink to his knees. Then she slipped quietly into the
garden, and through the Pool House returned by the south stairs
to her rooms.
Meader died without so much as a sound. Upon his death, the
?rst blooms of red roses appeared, vines wandering and growing
and extending themselves before my eyes. Within minutes, I
could no longer see inside the Health Room, overgrown as it was
by the wandering vines.
Nothing was found of George Meader for several hours,
except that coat he had removed. Only the next day, as the vines
impossibly receded and returned to their previous state, was the
body found. (The ?esh was torn by thorns as if he’d been rolled
in a bed of roses.)
John instructed the stable boys to cart the body downtown,
225
knowing I would refuse the police entrance into my home for
anything but outright murder, and even then only with the
proper documents.
Was it Rose or Sukeena who took George Meader from this
world? Does it matter any longer? I feel half crazy with it all.
(More than half, if you believe the staff.) I have nearly abandoned
my own suspicions of the Indian burial ground, and yet Indian
artifacts continue to surface in the house—and one, an earthen
ceramic bowl shaped as a beehive, did ?nd its way into the Health
Room, as I recall!
Perhaps the mysteries of this place will never be solved.
Perhaps some scientist will come along in future generations to
explain what I, sadly, cannot. Who’s to tell? One thing is for certain:
I will continue to build Rose Red until the day I die—or
until I myself am claimed—even with my own hands when necessary
(as I continue to construct the Tower). I will continue to
attempt to negotiate a longer life for myself that I might outlive
my husband—this I pray for more than anything. That I might
?nd my child still alive. (Adam is barely a part of my life, as John
will not allow him to return to this place—I know my son only
through letters, and these letters are less frequent each year.)
Another has died. I barely mourn the loss. Rose Red has her
needs. Sukeena and I must protect ourselves. Arthritis has found
my ?ngers, I am in excruciating pain, and I fear my entries here
in your pages, Dear Diary, shall be fewer and farther between.
What more is to be said? I live in a world, condemned. Made
into someone I am not by night, in my husband’s desperate
attempts to ?nd satisfaction, reduced to prayer and silence by day.
Sneaking off to build with my hands what this house demands of
me. “The Tower,” she whispers at night. My little April.
Soon, our reunion, as I have ordered the exterior of the
Tower to be built, my stairway nearing completion. A year or two
at most, I’m told, following on the heels of projects already
planned. A golden cherub has been ordered, cast in Italy by artisans
in Florence. This cherub will stand high atop Rose Red and
lord over our property. Perhaps over Rose Red herself.
Plans are taking shape. My daughter is coming home.
226
editor’s note: although the subsequent lack of
diary entries is attributed to ellen rimbauer’s
arthritis, there is some evidence that this period
proved traumatic to her and that she suffered at
least one breakdown. with the doctor’s recommendation
she attend “a clinic” (see 16 november 1921)
in switzerland, ellen rimbauer refused to leave
rose red and her beloved sukeena. recently recovered