The diary reveals how, while vacationing in Africa during the construction of her home, Ellen Rimbauer fell deathly ill and made the acquaintance of Sukeena, a local tribeswoman who nursed her back to health. Ellen and Sukeena became close, and Sukeena accompanied the Rimbauers back to the United States to work full-time at the now-completed Rose Red. The Rimbauers had a son, Adam, and a daughter, April (born with a withered left arm). Bizarre deaths and unresolved disappearances began to occur at the house. Many servants disappeared and one of John Rimbauer's friends died in the
solarium from an allergic reaction to a bee sting. John Rimbauer's business partner (whom Rimbauer had cheated out of his part of their oil fortune) hanged himself in the parlor in front of the Rimbauer children. Six-year-old April also disappeared in the house, never to be seen again. Sukeena was the last person to see April alive before she vanished and was tortured by the local police after being suspected of April's murder. After April's disappearance, eight-year-old Adam was sent to a boarding school and kept away from Rose Red. Soon thereafter, John Rimbauer (whom his wife suspected of
adultery) committed suicide by throwing himself through a stained glass window in the mansion's tower (an event which the reader later learns was actually murder, committed by Ellen and Sukeena). According to Ellen, the house telepathically spoke to her and told her what it wanted constructed. Ellen did what the house wanted because the house promised to return April if she did. Mysterious disappearances continued: Deanna Petrie, a glamorous actress and friend of Ellen's (who was also rumored to have had a sexual relationship with her) vanished within the house while attending a party in the 1940s. A few years after, Sukeena disappeared and only Ellen and a few servants occupied the property. ==Reception==