Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
vengeance. They will stop at nothing to see you fail. I would
attribute a great deal of the rumor to this and this alone.”
“But not all,” I said.
“John Rimbauer is a respected businessman, a man at the very
peak of society. For me, or any others, to color him this way or
that without any ?rsthand knowledge is undigni?ed and without
call. He is twenty years our senior, yours and mine. A man of the
world. What are we to expect of him? That he spent these past two
decades in a monastery? Clearly he did not. I would not trouble
20
myself over his past. His future is with you, dear child, and a
bright future I should think. Very bright indeed.”
“But you’ve heard things.”
“Words is all. Words can be so destructive, especially when
they are just so much ?ction.”
“But we don’t know that. I don’t know that,” I said.
“I have been married three years. I have given birth to two
children in that time. One lived. One did not. My husband is a
brilliant surgeon, a ?ne man and a loving husband. He does not
always come home when he says he will. Sometimes it is with the
smell of liquor on his clothes. Not perfume, thank God, but a
woman’s imagination can paint many a dif?cult picture, can it
not? I love my husband, Ellen. He is not perfect. Neither am I.
Neither is John Rimbauer. I’m certain of it. But these are challenging
times. We live in a challenging part of the country—some
still refer to it as the frontier. Can you imagine? I trust my husband’s
love, even if at times I question his actions. Never to his
face. Never aloud. A woman’s heart is much stronger than a
man’s. They are weak creatures, dear. Weak, and often far more
insecure than they present on the outside. Trust your love, child.
The rest will follow.”
“What is it you’ve heard?” I asked.
“Are you listening?”
“Yes, and I appreciate your sound advice more than I can tell
you. But I simply must know what is being said behind my back,
behind the back of my future husband, or am I to be the laughingstock?”
“There are women who can see the past, and some even the
future. Have you ever consulted such a medium, my child?”
“A séance?”
“They take all forms.”
I felt ?ushed with excitement. “Have you ever consulted such a
person?”
21
“Oh, I do so regularly. Not always with my husband’s knowledge,
you understand. So you see two can play at this game of
carefully guarded secrets. I am trusting you not to betray our
friendship and share any of this with John Rimbauer.”
“Of course not.” I felt giddy. A medium. I’d read news
reports, but I had never met anyone who had actually attended
such a séance. “What can I expect from such an experience?”
“Remarkable. Profound. Transcendental. You have never
experienced anything quite like it. For all my heightened anticipation
of the union of a husband and wife, I must admit to you
now, dear friend, that I ?nd a séance quite a good deal more
stimulating.” She showed her teeth when she laughed. She had
gold work throughout. She appreciated her little joke more than I
did, implying that I would be let down by the culmination of my
forthcoming marriage, the anticipated union of which, only here
in your pages, can I admit my honest excitement.
“Is it true the mediums can see to the other side?”
“I do not know what to believe, but I imagine they can, yes.
That is, I have experienced such a connection myself, during a
séance, and I must confess . . .”
I found her timidity provocative. She teased me with her
reluctance to divulge all, begging my curiosity. I gripped my
teacup with both hands and caught myself leaning into her every
breath, wanting more. “Yes?”
“I think it far wiser for you to make your own estimations,
dear friend. My experience . . . Well, you see . . . That is, I
believe each of us . . . either the connection with the other world
is there or not. And for me it was . . . is . . . and as to whether it
might be for you.”
“But I know it is,” I said, clearly startling her. “My prayers are
answered, you see.”
“Yes, well . . . prayers . . . There is more to the netherworld,
dear friend, than one can possibly imagine. And it would be
22
improper and wrong of me to imply it all has to do with angels
and prayer. Some of what is revealed is most unpleasant. Not at
all the stuff of prayers.” She placed down her own cup and craned
forward. When she spoke, it was less a voice than a cold wind. Less
a woman than a presence. The curtains behind me ruf?ed as if
that window were open, which it was not. The crystal of the chandelier
tinkled. I swear the temperature of the room dropped a
dozen or more degrees. I could see her breath as she spoke.
“Many of the dead are still living. Whether you believe this or
not, that is not my concern.” She waved her long ?ngers dismissively.
She looked pale, almost gray. “One does not attempt to
make contact with the other side without a certain . . . shall we
say . . . personal investment.” A wry smile. She was consumed. I
shuddered from the sudden cold, longing for a shawl or a throw
over my shoulders. “One does not approach this lightly.” She
leaned back.
The curtain stopped moving, as did the chandelier. The color
returned to her cheeks and the temperature of the parlor was
restored. I am certain I must have looked the idiot, my mouth
sagging open in abject horror. For a minute, I swear to you, Dear
Diary, Tina Coleman was not in that room. It was someone—
something—else entirely. And I will also tell you this: I am a
believer. Nothing in that room was of the world I know. Nor can
I perceive that place from which it came. But I am fascinated and
intrigued, as curious as a person can be about something so
unknown.
I wanted to ask her for the name of her medium right there
and then, but something prevented me from doing so. Fear?
Guilt? Was it John looking over my shoulder and cautioning me
that “no wife of John Rimbauer will be found to be engaged in
such sinful activities.”
For I have no doubt as to its sinful nature. None whatsoever.
God, whoever and however He may be, was nowhere to be found
23
in that room this afternoon. And I would be lying if I did not
admit to a certain amount of enthrallment, dare I say attraction,
to whatever occupied my new friend for those brief few seconds.
A power greater than any I have known. A power that both ?lled
me with a numbing cold and an unspeakable heat that penetrated
the depths of my soul. This is a friend I long to visit with once
again. A power I yearn to feel again. To glimpse such a formidable
presence is one thing. To taste it, to drink of it, yet another.
To be owned by it—what must that be like? And how soon until I
can ?nd out?
24
12 november 1907—seattle
I am sitting in my mother’s dressing room and parlor, a room in
which I doubt my father has ever set foot. I am here, in front of
the mirror where for years I have watched her brush her red hair
before bed. I am perplexed, and nearly in a state, some moments
giddy, some pensive, some nearly in tears, clothed in my wedding
gown, a garment at once both splendid and lush, yet fetching (or
so I hope). My maid of honor, dear Penelope Strait, has gone off
to inspect the route of my descent to the front door and the team
of two black geldings who shall deliver me to the church in royal
fashion. She said she would arrange tea to be delivered, and given
this small break, this moment alone, it is to you, Dear Diary, that
I now turn.
I feel a bit like the young girlish child who once picked at
daisies reciting, “I love him, I love him not.” Petal by petal my
poor heart labors over my decision to marry John Rimbauer. I
feel both passion for John and reservation, cloaked as I am under
the uncertainties that rise to the lips of my friends. The caution
in their eyes that greets me whenever John’s name is mentioned. I
fear that in a very short time, I am to marry a ladies’ man, I am to
be both pitied and scorned by my peers. And I shiver with the
thought. “Deliver me from evil and leadeth me not into temptation.”
Why do I ?nd it so dif?cult to move on from these
thoughts? Why do I weep now at my mother’s mirror, knowing I
shall never live in this home again?
Following the reception, John and I are to take the
Presidential Suite at the Grand, where we shall stay but a single
night prior to our departure on the Ocean Star, bound for the
Paci?c Atolls. I am told the native women go bare-breasted there,
and the men wear loincloths and the water is as clear as an old
man’s eyes. Much has been made in Europe about the changing
face of ?ne art, and the in?uence these islands have had, and
25
John would like to experience this part of the world ?rsthand.
Oil is not used on the islands, and he claims he might consider
starting a small business there, but these islands are said to be
rustic and quite taken to debauchery and even open fornication,
and I don’t know whether to believe this or not. If true, what kind
of a place is it for a woman? Why would John bring his new wife
to such a place? And is this trip of ours to be made as husband
and wife, or businessman and wife? I harbor all these questions,
but I ask nothing of John, for it riles him so when I challenge his
decisions. He takes it for criticism instead of the curiosity it is.
And so more tears fall here upon your pages, for I know not what
I have gotten myself into. Wealth. Position. A darkly handsome
man who has caught the eye of many an eligible girl. But twenty
years my senior, moody and private. About our trip overseas he
has only told me “to pack for a long trip. A year or more.
Warmth, cold. Prepare for it all.”
“But where are we going, my dearest?”
“To the islands ?rst, as we’ve discussed. India, perhaps.
Burma or Tibet if we can ?nd passage. The British have long
since installed magni?cent rail lines in this part of the world, and
how far behind can an oil-burning locomotive be? I tell you,
Ellen, Omicron is in a position to be an international supplier.
We have the jump on the Far East because of our base here in
Seattle. And after that? Persia. I’d like to see Persia. And then on
to Africa as the seas blow cold and that continent warms with
summer winds. East Africa, of course. Good hunting. And
around the Cape and up the coast to Spain, France and Britain,
if war doesn’t prevent us. New York. Philadelphia. And then by
rail again. Chicago? Denver? Who’s to know? The world is ours,
my dear. Five star. The best cabins, coaches and the ?nest suites
at the grandest hotels, train cars all to ourselves. Six months? A
year? Long enough for the completion of the grand house, so
that we have that magni?cent structure to which to return. A
26
place of our own. A place to raise the children that I hope you’ll
be carrying before our return. A family, Ellen. Just think of it.”
Said with such passion and enthusiasm. Who was I to cut in
with the voice of reason? To intrude upon my husband’s shining
moment. Never mind the insects that came to mind, the disease
carried by every living creature in such places, never mind the
rumors of bare-breasted heathens (it seemed he had chosen only
primitive locations). Never mind that I might have preferred San
Francisco, Paris and London. A year in Paris, Venice or Rome—
now there was a honeymoon! Long hours spent languishing in
bed under a down comforter with room service a bell pull away,
hot bubble baths with Parisian soaps and my husband to guide me
through the pleasures of being husband and wife. But for him,
hunting. Natives. Exploration. Elephants, diamond mines and
the Iron Horse.
I kept my thoughts to myself the ?rst time he mentioned the
trip. And the second. And the third. Always telling myself there
would be plenty of time to set the course straight. That course
now starts to-morrow. Pier 47. We steam to Victoria, switch ships
and board for the Tahitian Islands. I see in myself this hesitation
to confront John, a reluctance to spoil his good moods, or dare
to enter his bad ones. He lives on these giant swings, like an ape,
back and forth, high to low. Perhaps the great Sigmund Freud,
about whom everyone is talking (his publication on the sexual
theory is under translation into English but is said by Germans
who have read it to be quite scandalous and intriguing), would
have some way to quantify John’s moods. For me they are dif?cult
to read, and dangerous to intrude upon. At his most elevated
moments, he is so exciting and stimulating to be around: animated,
courteous and entertaining; at his low points he is sullied,
dark and brooding. I fear him. I anticipate violence at times,
though have yet to see—and I hope I never will!—this side of him