Episode 4: My Music Goes Silent

Marriage after completing an architectural degree. And the aftermath

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My Music Goes Silent

July 1974 proved to be yet another threshold.  The well-known Andy Warhol image of the can of Campbell’s tomato soup accompanied a short invitation to celebrate a wedding, promising a cup of broth for all.  Now we are all assembled in the dining-living room of the double storey terrace house in Avoca villas, Gardens.  A table of refreshments with pots of the promised soup on hand to honour this event.  My marriage to someone calling himself C A.  This is not his real name.  It is Stanley.  Stanley William is who I married that afternoon at the Magistrate’s Office in Simonstown, and the details are entered in the Register of important events, like marriages and deaths.

I am twenty-three and I am married.  I glance across at my father… he had been quite nervous but jovial driving me down to Simonstown in my old VW Beetle – our last road trip together in our father-daughter roles.  Now I am a married woman and he has acquired a son-in-law; not his choice, not his idea.. Perhaps the reason I have done this?…  I actually asked this man, eight years my senior, to marry me.  It was my suggestion.  Why have I done this?

He is charming.  Witty, cruelly witty, sharp, which comes from his own low self-esteem and sense of self-worth.  But I don’t know this yet.  Except that he did change his name, and when I fell in love with him. He was an architect, or so he told me.  And for some reason I longed to be in a partnership with an architect.  I had followed my father’s path becoming an architect and envied my friends Vivienne and Derek, Hilary and Derek, Kate and Mark.  I was elated when I thought I had found my ideal type in a partner.  But C was a draughtsman.  He had come from Natal, having reinvented himself along the way with a new name, leaving Stanley with his early disappointments and had introduced himself to me as an architect.  It was some time later when the physical relationship had begun that I found this was not the case.  Too late.  And now having been enchanted, I find myself married.

I look across the room past my father – more relaxed now with a few whiskies under his belt, and see my mother sitting near my piano.  She has sent it down to me from Port Elizabeth now that I have a home and have settled into my new phase.  This day  is also my parents’ silver wedding anniversary.  I felt it auspicious to choose the same day twenty-five years later, for my own.  From my perspective my parents have had a warm and loving relationship.  I am very close to my father and know that I seek out moments of complicity with him when we discuss ideas which we share.

Now I look past my parents to where the man I have just married is seated, his long strong legs outstretched in his brown denim suit.  The bell-bottomed trousers are tight across his crotch as he leans back in his chair.  The wide lapels of the broad-shouldered jacket, so fashionable at this time, hiding his cream shirt.  I notice that the shirt collar is untidily crushed under the jacket collar.  It looks unruly, and as I am observing this detail, suddenly from across the room I see B moving towards him.  She is his attractive graphics assistant, arriving every morning to work with him in the upstairs studio next to our bedroom.

I am riveted, watching something unfold.  I know then with a deep inner knowing that I have today made a huge mistake as I witness B-anne lean forward towards him and gently take his shirt collar out from under his jacket and pat it slowly down over the lapels.  It is almost a caress, and I see the glance he gives her in thanks.

The next morning after a sleepless and tormented night, I drove his little mother who had come down from Durban for the wedding, around the peninsular in my new role as ‘daughter-in-law, while my new husband went about his business.

And then, what…? My memories are painful and blurred.  I withdrew into my fragile inner life, acutely aware of the need to nurture and protect myself.  My beautiful Bechstein 1901 piano stood muted in that unhappy house, a silenced witness to my wounded heart as the next few years unfolded, and I grappled with the enormity of betrayal.

Betrayal is a huge word.