Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
warmth, the likes of which I’ve only read about in my novels.
Perhaps Mother is right!) I should like to relate here my recollection
of an exchange we had on the trip over.
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“John, dear,” I said, “do you suppose I should have offended
my mother by my refusal of a chaperone?”
“You’re a grown woman of nineteen, El.” (I love this nickname
for me he has chosen!) “Your mother was married and with
her second child by the time she was your age. I doubt very much
you could do anything to shock her.”
“You don’t know her as I do,” I said.
“I am twice your age. I should imagine that concerns your
parents. Especially as to my intentions.” He lowered his eyes to
me, running them down the full length of my dress to where I
felt faint. He understands full well this power he has over me,
uses it playfully, but on this occasion—and there have been others,
truth be told—it was not so much playful as provocative,
and he made no effort to disguise or conceal his lust. I felt certain
of it at the time. And what was I to do? I giggled, all
nerves, of course. Blushed no doubt. I felt the heat in my
cheeks. But I kept my chin high and my eyes on the muddy
road ahead.
“And what are your intentions?” I asked, suppressing a
smile.
“To ravish you, of course. To pluck your innocence from the
vine of youth and leave you for the next man to marry.”
“And my father will come after you with axe and rope.”
“And you? Will you refuse me?”
“Your so-called ravishing, of course. Until we are married.”
“Engaged or married?”
“We’ve had other . . . fun, John Rimbauer.” Certainly I
must have blushed again for I felt it in my face. We had
touched. We had kissed. His strong hands knew the shape of my
bosom (though never skin to skin!). Once, while dancing, he
had pressed himself to me and I had known of his arousal. But
he had yet to know of mine. Mother’s cautions of “a lady’s
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behavior” fall ?at on my ears. She lived in another time. All the
girls talk of touching their men—of pleasing them, if for no
other reason in an effort to quell their desires and protect their
own virginity, that most sacred of marriage rites. John’s age
perhaps has accounted for no such need on my part. He is
experienced. I treasure his worldliness, and believe it affords
me much opportunity.
“And more to come,” he said. “I trust we both will ?nd . . . ,”
he searched for his words, “great reward in marriage.”
“John!” I blurted out, like some sniveling twelve-year-old.
“Marriage?”
“Patience, my dear. Never push me. Never challenge my decisions.
If you hold to these two virtues, we will never have a single
quarrel, you and I. I am lord and master of my house. I have
worked long and hard to earn not only a small fortune but the
right to stake out my own territory, and that territory includes
opinion. You understand that, don’t you, dearest?”
“Yes, John.”
“No reservations.”
“None.”
“Because I am well aware of suffrage, and have no quarrel with
a person’s striving for individual freedoms. More power to them.
But not in my home, you understand? You will ?nd I can be a
most generous, most loving partner, my dear. But just ask Mr.
Posey what happens when my partners betray my trust or break
agreements. I am offering you many things in sharing a life with
me. Freedom is not necessarily one of them.”
“John Rimbauer, are you proposing marriage to me?” This, I
fear, is all I was thinking. All that I heard. Only now as I write
down my recollection of events, only now as I recall those words
of his clearly, do I feel their full import.
“Patience, my dear. Patience.” A smug smile. I felt for sure I
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knew what this day held in store. As it turned out, I couldn’t have
been more wrong. Neither John, nor I, could have possibly foreseen
events as they were about to unfold.
The property John purchased to hold his mansion, his grand
statement of achievement and success, is nothing short of spectacular.
It is crowned with a tall forest of cedar and pine, and
workers have cleared nearly six of the forty acres to hold the
house—if something so large can be called that! (I could not
believe the plans John showed me!) Though well out of the city,
the house sits at the muddy end of Spring Street. From this
location, one can see the entire city below. Spectacular! Just
west of the property is a tract that I’m told runs all the way to
Canada, and south as far as Mexico. How my imagination runs
wild with the thought: one road spanning the entire country.
Just think! The redwood forests. San Francisco. Los Angeles,
where they are now making ?lms. (Not quite two years ago,
when a traveling projectionist brought it to town, I saw Le Voyage
dans la Lune [A Trip to the Moon], adapted from the novel by Jules
Verne—I loved this book! The ?lm was ?fteen minutes long,
the longest ever made at the time, and was shown at Father’s
bank, of all places, because it had the largest white wall that
could be found.) I adore motion pictures, simply love actors
and actresses and hope that John and I will include them as our
guests when we make our home together—but I’m getting ahead
of myself! The property is accessed from the west. John parked
the Olds quite some distance from the construction—a gigantic
hole in the ground is all!—and, bless his heart, had had workers
lay a string of redwood planks, wide enough to walk upon, so I
might avoid the mud and ooze. Horse-drawn wagons came and
went, burdened and brimming with materials ordered by the
foreman, Williamson, a big, Irish-looking man with ?orid
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cheeks, a broad mustache and a surly disposition. He did not
appreciate a woman being on the premises, I can tell you that.
(He made several insinuations upon my arrival, that is until
dear John led him aside by the elbow and had words with him,
after which he ignored me with full contempt though was loath
to outwardly reveal his disapproval of me. I can only wonder
now if this brief altercation with my beloved, an altercation
that resulted from my attendance there, had something to do
with the events that would soon transpire. Oh, Good Lord,
pray let it not be so! Nay, do not curse me with the burden of
lost life!)
I am forced to wonder now about my musings put forth in my
?rst entry to these pages. Was what happened to-day at the grand
house the sense of foreboding danger that I felt so strongly? The
end of it, or just the beginning? The manifestation of some dark
power greater than can be imagined? Am I a part of this darkness,
or separate from it? Controlled by it, or instead by my prayers?
The pen trembles under my grasp as I search for these answers.
Am I, in fact, already possessed? Dare I think that? Dare I write
it? Dare I keep it to myself, for fear of spoiling the arrangements
already under way between my beloved and me? But oh, there I
go again. Back to the day, and the tragedy that befell us.
The cavernous hole cut into the earth on that forested slope so
far from the warmth of my family home forewarns of a structure,
in scope and size, that challenges even one’s imagination. I admit
fully that I had never visited any construction site prior to my
journey this day, and that perhaps because of this lacking I write
with what borders on ignorance, but I am no stranger to architecture.
I promise you that. Furthermore, I now intend to
immerse myself in the study of this science, along with that of
construction, so as to appreciate fully the efforts being undertaken
on our behalf. The sheer enormity of it! (I can only hope
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this does not match my future husband’s ego or conceit, for if so,
I am in for a formidable challenge in the years that lie ahead!) To
my eye, it rivals in size the university building that occupies the
hill to the south overlooking the city, that building that newcomers
nearly always mistakenly attribute to be the statehouse. I
believe John’s house—our house!—will dwarf this structure by
such proportion as to render it insigni?cant, will so dominate
that clearing where it will stand that it may be seen for miles.
Miles! I tell you! A landmark for generations to come. Why, the
hole in the ground, the foundation, is a marvel of excavation. I
watched as four-mule teams carved and cut the thick wet soil with
blades, followed by workers busy with shovels to ?ll wagons.
Wagon after wagon, hour after hour, and barely a dent in the
giant cavity. The scale of this project de?es description. I can
only say that nothing like it has ever been built. Perhaps even,
that nothing ever will be.
The event of the day, to which I wish to address myself, however,
was one of horri?c consequences, something no person,
certainly not a woman such as myself, should ever have to endure.
But ?rst to our arrival.
As we studied the magni?cent goings-on, the laborers with
their shovels, the teamsters with their wagons, the supervisors
working their crews with disciplined patience (for the hand
laborers are almost entirely Chinese or Negro and need much
supervision), I was struck by the militarylike organization of it all.
An easy analogy given the sharp tongue of Williamson.
This man Williamson was given to large bones and a massive
head; he had a commanding presence. Shouting and gesticulating,
he seemed to possess a language of hand signals known to all
who worked for him, but especially those supervisors immediately
his junior. He lorded from the porch of a rough-hewn
shanty, calling names and then waving his arms like a frantic
bird, directing deliveries, the removal of mud and dirt and the
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efforts of the teams. Perhaps John’s attendance contributed to
this man’s nerves, ?xing him in an agitated state. Having not met
Williamson previously, on this I cannot comment. However, I
must tell you, Dear Diary, that on no terms would I have wished
to be employed by Mr. Williamson on this day. His bilious, perfunctory
tone carried clear across the construction site, often
heard echoing right back at us, as if from the mouth of God.
(Not an insigni?cant reference, given the events to follow.)
Enough!
John and I made our way to the edge of the giant pit and
were witness to the ?rst of the stones being laid for the grand
home’s foundation. This, as it turned out, was the cause of our
delay these many weeks. John had wanted us to witness a
momentous occasion, not simply a hole being dug into the
earth (although I must confess here that the hole alone would
have surely impressed me as well). And there below us, a group
of ten or more Chinese ran—not walked—to and from a large
pile of stone, inspecting every angle before running—not walking
—that stone to a cutter who smacked it with a hammer and
chisel that rained stone chips in small showers all around him.
From there the stone was whisked to one of several Scottishlooking
gentlemen (it was dif?cult to discern ancestry, given
our perspective) who examined the rock, nodded his approval
and, applying mortar, positioned it in place. Stone by stone,
the ?rst of many of the grand home’s walls began to grow, as the
Scots worked as a team. (I am told seven thousand stones will be
used in the foundation alone!) I found myself mesmerized by
the sight. John, as I recall, had several conversations, but I
scarcely heard his words. What beauty. It seemed almost alive to
me, not as if it were being built, but instead, growing all of its
own. The thrill of witnessing this is hard to explain here in
these pages. I found it consumed me, awakened a heat in me,
not unlike what John Rimbauer is capable of with simply a touch
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or a whisper. Dare I say I was moved by this? The pleasing ?uidity.
The sweating Chinamen, some bare-chested, ?exing and
glistening as they bore their burden. I could not take my eyes
off of this activity. Not until, that is, Williamson’s voice arose
like an ill wind, cursing a string of profanities that forced such a
blush on my part my face must have looked like a ripened
cherry.
A large, overstocked wagon belonging to John stood in front
of the foreman’s shack, the driver equally as big as Mr.
Williamson, and equally verbose. It was clear, even from a great
distance, that Mr. Williamson did not approve of the quality of
the items being delivered. I cannot tell you exactly how I discerned
this, distracted, even repulsed as I was by the language
involved, but the conversation between them went something
like this:
“This is not what we ordered, Mr. Corbin.”
“This here is what I was told to deliver.”
“You should have checked your ***** load.”
“I loaded this ***** load, mister. I didn’t have to check it—I
loaded it.”
“Look at this quality. It’s horse***t. Pure horse***t, and