Read The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red Online
Authors: Ellen Rimbauer
Tags: #General, #Fiction
strength of heart. He will come to regret his in?delity, ultimately
and forever.
And I shall triumph, Sukeena at my side. She is coming home
with us. This is the ?rst of many concessions my husband shall
learn to make.
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15 june 1908—cairo, egypt
I cannot imagine any place hotter in all the world than Cairo in
June. We have sailed down the Nile for days (how strange a world
this is that north is downstream?). John is foul of mood, and no
wonder: he has not won my affections since late April when he
bestowed upon me that horrible curse. And now, in such close
company as this small ?at-bottomed boat, he cannot ?nd any
budding young women to pluck except those of the European
families that people this vessel—girls who can speak, read and
write—girls who would report him in an instant if he lifted their
skirts. He broods and drinks and brags with the other passengers,
wisely leaving Sukeena and me to ourselves, except at dinner at a
tedious captain’s table where liquor is the of?cial language and all
but I speak ?uently. I hear him tell his hunting stories and marvel
at his ability to win friends, and I watch the women swoon, and I
wonder if that is how I once looked in his company as well. I want
to hate him, but that vexation is slowly wearing off. Calculated or
not, he has taken some time to charm me, has helped me pick out
several splendid rugs from Persia (bought in Luxor) and a great
deal of woven wicker—baskets and hampers mostly, some seventy-
?ve in all. The prize so far is the hand-carved alabaster. We are to
have dinner, bread and salad plates, soup bowls of two sizes, all
for a table of forty. It is to be shipped to Seattle within the year,
each piece carefully packed. John said that if half the cargo
arrived undamaged we should consider it a victory, at which point
I increased the alabaster order to a serving for eighty, and
watched John wince at the increase in price, although these dirtpoor
Egyptian farmers are practically giving away such wares. I
could have increased it to eight hundred and not taken a week of
my husband’s income. Indeed, if I am to have any revenge on my
husband, I see clearly now that it absolutely must come in the
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construction of the grand house. That is the only weapon I
possess.
I have come to detest the Europeans for their treatment of my
dear Sukeena. Of those who acknowledge her presence (precious
few, I’m sorry to say), few treat her with any respect above a slave.
A French couple was nice to her—the woman offered her some
clothes that would ?t (mine are far too small for her) and she
accepted. A Canadian woman was quite thoughtful and respectful
and always greeted Sukeena by name. The rest were brutes. I was
glad to be free of the Sun Ra, even if it meant the streets of Cairo.
Few cities in the world are as densely populated as this one.
Brown bodies by the millions, all covered in long cotton robes of
soft browns and a few subtle greens. They look like nightgowns—
as if everyone has just woken up. The men wrap their heads in
white cotton. The women cover their faces—all but the black eyes
that stare straight ahead, unseeing and yet all seeing. Water buffalo
drag carts through the streets but foul the sunbaked brick and
make a stink that rises with the sun. People wash themselves in the
river—this river that is the heart of the land—they wash their
babies, their food utensils, their camels. The river is putrid and
foul—and they practically live in it.
But to the story at hand! Sukeena and I were bicycled by rickshaw
into the city’s main market—deep in the center of humanity.
We were not, by any means, the only visitors to this city, but it felt
that way. We collected some trinkets, a good deal of colorful fabrics
and a few more pieces of alabaster, these ornately carved. All
our goods were stacked high on the three-wheeled bicycle, our
driver never hesitating a moment to add to his load. After about
an hour of this, we took tea in a small teahouse where young boys
circulated the air by manning large fans. The tea helped me to
perspire, which in turn cooled me off. I made the mistake of
showing my coin purse to pay for the tea—a practice John has
warned me against time and time again, and one I just cannot
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seem to master. At any rate, I committed this mistake ( John is
right, of course) and must have shown to all those looking a good
deal of bills within that small purse, for John had just exchanged
some dollars upon our arrival and had provided me appropriate
spending money.
I realize now this must have been staged, but at the time the
commotion that arose at the front of the building drove Sukeena
and me to the rear, in hopes of escaping the melee. As we
slipped out the back, not one, but two very evil-minded men
approached, their message clear from the knives they carried: the
purse, or our lives. I nearly fainted at this threat of violence, and
it did not escape me that as men confronting a white-skinned
woman they might want more than just my purse.
I willingly offered the purse, but Sukeena lovingly took hold
of my arm, shook her head “no” and made me to hold on to it.
One of the two stepped forward—I believe to challenge us, certainly
to challenge Sukeena. But that brave woman stood tall. Her
skin so dark it shined blue. “Nubian!” they called out in their
foreign tongue.
And then I witnessed with my own eyes a side of Sukeena I had
never before seen. She stared at this man—a glaring stare unlike
anything, impossible to describe. She stepped toward him, her
body ?uid and ?awless, moving more like a wave than a step, a
snake than a legged creature. And all the while a deep, low, guttural
sound pulsated from her throat and chest. This sound
seemed to surround us. The man, increasingly uncomfortable
with her approach, took a step back, the ?rst sign she had dominion
over him. At this point, the guttural sound evolved into language
—a tongue I had never heard, not in all our travels in the
dark continent. But this man, and his associate, apparently
understood the primitive message she imparted. As she waved her
hands the man stopped, absolutely still. As still as marble. That
knife carried as an ornament, not a weapon. Both men began to
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tremble—and I swear I felt the earth beneath my feet rumbling—
like a self-contained earthquake. Then they folded in on themselves
and writhed in pain on the ground as if stricken by some
disease to the stomach or bowels. What began as their moaning
developed into cries of terror.
Sukeena took my hand, stepped around the one in front of us
and led me down the alley to our waiting driver. As I looked back,
the men were still groaning miserably.
Sukeena has not spoken of the incident, and I, for one, am
glad of that fact, for I’d know not what to say. But I am less concerned
about travel deep into these foreign streets now. I feel
protected, defended against the dark side by my African friend. I
am more intrigued by her unspeakable powers. Where such powers
come from, and whether or not a person can learn them, can
adopt them for her own, I have yet to discover. But with Sukeena
to teach me, I suddenly feel that anything is possible. Anything
my heart desires.
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4 july 1908—crete, greece
Our nation’s birthday was met by much drinking on John’s part.
He began his celebrations before noon, partaking in the clear
liquor these ?shermen drink by the shot, said to be a variation on
grain alcohol. The Greeks, of course, have little if any idea of our
Independence Day, and must ?nd John’s display of patriotism
somewhat confounding.
Sukeena and I toured a ruin, an old port city now inland by a
quarter mile, rocked above sea level in a seismic shift two thousand
years earlier. We visited a row of stone tubs used for washing
laundry, so well preserved that all they lacked was a stopper and
some soap to be put back into service. This is the land of raw olive
oil, squid and goats that climb trees (I saw this with my own
eyes!). A quiet, peace-loving peasant people with a rich appetite
for café discussion, drinking and coffee so strong and bitter that
it turns my stomach.
It was here, this morning, in a spectacular suite of rooms
overlooking the rich blue depths of the Mediterranean that my
will surrendered to John for the ?rst time since this past April.
The morning broke incredibly hot and I slipped out of bed to
stand by the ocean breeze at the window when my husband took
hold of me from behind, his massive hands beneath my gown
before my voice could rise to protest. I grabbed for either side of
the open French doors and braced myself, casting myself forward
and clearly inviting his ardor, the hem of my nightgown riding on
my hips, his brazen intentions driving me to my toes, my knees
quivering, my heart racing. My God, I must admit here to the
thrill of it all. Our passions mutually heightened by my months
of refusal, John’s aggressiveness, so masculine and forceful, yet
careful and kind to me. I could not maintain my footing, and
therefore slowly sank to my knees, my husband keeping us joined
and fervently pursuing his climax, to where, in a dizzying
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moment of unbridled sensation I tried to call out to him, only to
hear my voice moan through indistinguishable syllables that he
clearly took as a signal. We collapsed in a gasp of satisfaction, he
on my back, me with my face pressed to the tile ?oor. “This is
hardly a situation becoming of a lady,” I said weakly, winning a
spontaneous eruption of laughter from the both of us.
“Our morning ride,” he said, and we laughed again.
When we were apart he rolled me over and we lay together
again, half in, half out of our bedroom, half in, half out of consciousness,
basking in the morning sunshine, basking in our
union. I wrapped my legs tightly around his waist and heard
myself say, “It’s all behind us, yes?”
“I have hope it is.”
“Never again.”
“Never,” he said, gently touching my cheek. “I was a fool,
Ellen.” And then the words I had prayed to hear. “Forgive me.”
“We will not speak of it. Not now. Not ever.” From where this
capitulation arose, I know not. Perhaps I wanted a marriage back.
A life. Perhaps my con?dence in Sukeena’s enormous powers
made John Rimbauer less of an obstacle and more of a game to
me. I felt more the cat than the mouse. I had what he wanted:
ability to deliver his heir. He had what I had quickly grown accustomed
to: position, power and tremendous wealth.
As we lay there, this forty-year-old man grew ardent yet again,
and again I capitulated. And for the ?rst time since our marriage,
I directed him as to the choreography of my pleasure. With each
instruction I gave, I witnessed arousal in my husband, excitement.
He would answer each touch I gave to him with a hearty,
throaty, “Yes!” and do exactly as I wished. I tell you, Dear Diary: I
never knew . . . I never knew. But under my careful instruction,
both of the hips and the hands, he did pleasure me, carrying me
to new sensations that both alarmed me (for my surrender to
them) and overcame me with pure and perfect delight (my every
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muscle on ?re at once!). My legs still gripped around him, I
eased my damp head of hair back to resting, my chest a ?orid
pink, my husband panting like a long-distance runner. “Good
boy, Johnny,” I said, using a nickname I had never dared use
before, adopting an attitude—as much a test as a conviction.
He placed his head on my chest, and brie?y was that little boy
I had complimented. I cannot explain in these pages, but in that
moment the tide of our relating husband to wife did shift, wife to
husband. I gained the strength and courage to express my physical
desires, and in doing so somehow also gained the upper hand
over my formerly de?ant husband. I didn’t want to think about
the past, I wanted to command the future.
As we dressed and took coffee on the balcony, I felt another
stirring in my loins, and nearly requested my husband’s favors yet
again. But this stirring was something altogether different from a
woman’s urges. At ?rst I blamed this awful coffee and then, later,
the excitement pent up from my morning discoveries and the
accomplishment of one part of my dream.
But then I blamed the act itself (or the acts, if one is counting!).
For though I’d never experienced the condition ?rsthand,
could only speculate on the sensation surging through my soul
(not my body, but my soul), I sensed the presence of another life.
A life within me. I was pregnant.
I knew this absolutely and with all conviction. The ?rst ?edgling
moments of a human being were growing inside me.
When Sukeena saw me it was all but con?rmed. She met me in
our rooms, looked deeply into my eyes and smiled widely. “So,”