Michelle Sacks

The Dark Path: The dark, shocking thriller that everyone is talking about


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      I lay there and pretended to enthuse. Oh, yes. More. Please. He likes it when I beg. When I say thank you afterward, like he has given me a gift.

      Some days it is harder than others to remember gratitude. To acknowledge my awful good luck. Sam went slow, stopping to look into my eyes. He repulses me sometimes. A physical reaction to his smell and his touch; the way he breathes through his mouth with his tongue lifted up, the way the hairs on his shoulders sprout in odd patches of wiry black strands.

      Something inside me heaves and shudders to have him close.

      I suppose that’s normal.

      I love you, Merry, he said, and then I did feel it. Grateful. Loved. Or at least I think it’s what I felt. Sometimes it’s hard to know for sure.

      Sam on top, inside, he clutched at me with both hands and breathed into my ear.

      Let’s make a baby, he said, right before he came.

      I was up early this morning, shaved, dressed, half out the door. Merry was setting Conor down in his high chair.

      Where are you going?

      Uppsala again, I said. I told you a few days ago.

      You didn’t, she said.

      It’s okay, I said, giving them each a quick kiss. You probably just forgot. You know how bad your memory can be.

      You’re going again?

      It’s a callback, I said. A meeting with the executive creative director this time.

      She nodded. Good luck.

      In the car, I checked the time, then my phone.

      10 a.m., I wrote.

      I pulled out of the drive and headed slowly past the neighboring houses. Mr. Nilssen was out with the horses. I raised my hand in greeting. He’s supposedly a billionaire. Sells his horses to the Saudis but still drives a Honda. God, I love the Swedes. Gives me a thrill every morning, driving out, seeing where we live and how. The sheer good fortune of it all. Sometimes you get lucky, I guess.

      The day was going to be a good one. Sunny and clear. The traffic was smooth.

      In forty minutes, I was outside her apartment door, ringing the doorbell.

      You’re early, she said when she opened up. She was wearing a dress, ivory satin, tied tightly against her so it looked like she’d been submerged in thick cream. Her hair was loose, long, and blond and softly curled at the shoulders.

      Hello, Malin. I smiled.

      Come inside, she said.

      Later, around the boardroom table, I looked at six young Swedes as they watched my reel. It’s a mix of old footage from the field and some new material I’ve been working on in the studio I’ve set up for myself at home. It’s good work. I know my way around a scene. I’ve been told that I have an excellent eye for framing. That I’m a natural at this.

      I sipped an espresso from a mint green cup.

      This is great, the creative director commented, very dynamic.

      I reckon I have a fresh perspective, I said. With my background.

      It wasn’t so difficult, all this self-promotion. Fake it till you make it and all.

      It says here you taught at Columbia?

      Yes, I said.

      Why the career change?

      I gave a wry smile. Well, after enough years teaching young people, you realize you’ve got it in reverse. They know it all and you’re just a dinosaur with a piece of chalk.

      Oh, and I was fired. I guess I could have added that.

      They laughed. A good answer. Endearing, not too cocky. I’ve got it down to an art.

      So you did a lot of filmmaking as an anthropologist?

      Some, yes. Mostly in the early days of my career, the time I spent doing fieldwork in Africa. But film was always what I really wanted to do. That’s why I’ve returned to documentary now.

      They looked at me and I smiled. Not one of them a day over thirty, and all of them so effortlessly self-possessed you’d think they were Fortune 500 CEOs.

      Snow tires. The shoot is for a company that makes snow tires.

      Great, I said. Sounds interesting.

      A mobile phone rang and the producer got up to take the call. Before he left the room, he slipped a business card onto the table in front of me.

      Sorry, the creative director said, we’re busy with a big project at the moment; everyone’s a little distracted.

      It was my cue to leave. I shut my laptop and stood up, knocking the chair back as I did.

      He shook my hand. We’ll let you know.

      How was your meeting? Merry asked when I got back home.

      It was good, I said, really good.

      She beamed. Wonderful.

      She had Conor in her arms, freshly bathed and ready for bed.

      His eyes were red, like he’d been crying.

      Did you two have a good day? I asked.

      Oh, for sure, she said. The best.

      Domestic chores aren’t usually Sam’s department, but last night he volunteered to bathe the baby. He emerged from the bathroom afterward holding him in a towel.

      Hey, he said, what’s this over here?

      He lifted the towel and showed me the child’s thighs. My face flushed. I had not noticed the marks, four little blue bruises against his skin.

      That is strange, I said. I swallowed.

      I wonder, Sam said, could his clothes be too tight? Could that be it?

      Yes, I said, more than likely. I should have bought him the next size up by now.

      Sam nodded. Well, you should take care of that in the morning.

      Absolutely, I said, first thing.

      And so, in the name of new baby clothes, I was permitted the car for today. Sam took the baby and I headed into Stockholm, music blaring, windows open to the warm midsummer air. Exhilarating, the heady feeling of freedom, of leaving the island behind. I had dressed up, a light floral summer skirt, a sleeveless blouse.

      In Stockholm, I parked the car and checked my face in the mirror. I loosened my hair and shook it out. I painted on mascara and lined my lips with color. Transformed. I walked a short way to a café in Södermalm I’d read about.

      Sometimes I do this, page through travel magazines and imagine all the alternative lives I might be living. Drinks at the newest gin bar in Barcelona, a night in Rome’s best boutique hotel.

      I picked up an English newspaper from the counter and sat at a table by the window, pretending to read. I love to peoplewatch in the city. Everyone is so beautiful. Clear skin and bright eyes, hair shining, bodies taut and well proportioned. There is no excess. Nothing bulging out or hanging over or straining at the seams. Even their clothes seem immune to crumpling. It isn’t just Karl and Elsa next door: it’s a whole country of them.

      Immaculate Elsa. I should probably invite her over for fika, try to make friends. We could discuss pie recipes and childrearing; I might ask her about her skincare routine. Only I’ve never been very good at it. Female friendships. Well, apart from Frank, I suppose.

      Sam keeps asking if I’m excited for her visit. I try to be enthusiastic.