Raised as devout Seventh-day Adventists, who believe that the end of the world is near and that premarital sex is a terrible sin, Rochelle and her husband marry young. Rebelling against their upbringing, and in an attempt to overcome problems in their relationship, they enter an agreement that has its own strict rules. Fallen is a frank, compelling and beautifully written memoir about sex, religion and marrying too young – and about what it feels like when you can’t keep the promises you once sincerely made. Here is Debrief Daily’s exclusive book extract.
So we had our big white wedding. We did it reluctantly – not the marriage, but the ceremony – for our parents and for the people at church. We had all the trimmings: the three-tiered fruitcake entombed in waxen royal icing; the white satin dress edged in feathers that brought out an allergic rash on my chest; the hired vintage cars and the historic church with stained-glass windows – the church where Ellen G White herself had preached in 1892.
There were five bridesmaids, including Esther and Claudia, and five groomsmen, including my brother. There were high heels, morning suits, red roses and multi-coloured paper confetti that stuck to our skin and left pink and blue trails when the raindrops fell that cold July day. It was perfect and horrible. I shocked myself with tears of happiness as I walked down the aisle knowing it would be forever; that Isaac would be the only man I’d ever love like this, and the last one I’d sleep with. We pledged to have and to hold, forsaking all others, till death do us part; we ditched the line about obedience because we’d both been reading Germaine Greer that year. Then we scratched our names on the watermarked parchment certificate with Isaac’s old calligraphy pen.
Afterwards there was the sober lunchtime banquet with no alcohol, no meat and no dancing. A string quartet sawed away at Vivaldi and Mozart, and Isaac was busy with his hundreds of relatives, many of whom I’d only met at the engagement party. I clung to Esther and Claudia, who sat beside me at the bridal table picking at their food and longing for champagne. They knew few of the guests and made me laugh with their whispered observations of my prayer group friends. ‘They’re so daggy – do they know what you’re really like?’ asked Esther between mouthfuls of dry mushroom and nut loaf, and sips of fizzy grape juice served in white wine goblets.