โโItโs a Swiss- system tournament. Kind of. Not really, though.โโ
Easton gathers our team around her, like sheโs Tony Stark briefing the Avengers, but instead of quippy one- liners she hands out Paterson Chess Club pins. There must be three hundred people on the second floor of the Fulton Stall Market, and I am the only one who didnโt get the business casual memo.
Oops.
โEach one of us is going to play four matches,โ she continues. โBecause itโs for charity, and because the tournament is open to amateurs, instead of using FIDE ratings, players are going to be matched according to self- reported ability.โ
FIDE, the World Chess Federation (Why isnโt the acronym WCF? Not sure, but I suspect the French language is involved) has a complicated system to determine playersโ skill levels and rank them accordingly. I knew all about it when I was seven, chess obsessed, and wanted to grow up to be a mermaid Grandmaster. By now, though, Iโve forgotten most bureaucratic stuff, probably to make room for more useful informationโ like the best way to crimp a wire terminal, or the plot of the first three seasons ofย How to Get Away with Murder. All I remember is that to get a rating one needs to sign up for FIDE- sponsored tournaments. Which, of course, I havenโt done in agesโ because I havenโt played in ages.
Four years, five months, and two weeks, and no, I will not stoop to counting the days.
โSo we have to self- report our level of skill?โ Zach asks. Heโs a Montclair freshman who joined the Paterson Chess Club after I left and has some ambitions of going pro. Iโve met him once at Oscarโs place and Iโm not a fan, for reasons that include his penchant for derailing conversations with unrelated mentions of his FIDE rating (2,546), his ability to carry out hour- long monologues on his FIDE rating (2,546), and his lack of understanding that Iโm not interested in going out with him, no matter his FIDE rating (2,546).
But heโs still better than our fourth member, Josh, whose claim to fame is repeatedly implying that Easton would be a little less gay if only she made out with him at least once.
โSince Iโm the team leader, I went ahead and declared your skill levels,โ Easton tells us. โI putโ โ
โWhy are you the leader?โ Zach asks. โI donโt remember having an election.โ
โThen Iโm the team dictator,โ she hisses. I fix my pin to my tee to hide a smile. โI put Mallory in the highest bracket.โ
I drop my arms. โEaston. Iโveย barelyย played inโ โ
โZachโs in the highest, too. Third highest for myself,โ she continues, ignoring me. Then she looks at Josh and pauses for effect. โThe lowest for you.โ
Josh bursts into his wholesome, golden boy laughter. โJoking aside, what bracket did you . . .โ Easton keeps staring, serious as death and taxes, and he lowers his eyes to the floor.
โDoes the PCC have your browser history?โ I ask Easton once itโs just the two of us, heading toward the hall.
โWhy?โ
โThereโs no way youโre here of your own free will, not with those two.
So either they found out about the tentacle porn, orโ โ
โThereโsย noย tentacle porn.โ She gives me a scathing look. โThe manager of the club asked me to put together a team. I couldnโt say no, since he
wrote me a rec letter for college. He was just exploiting the fact that I owe him a favor.โ She shoulders past two older men in suits to get to the tournament area. โLike you did when you sicced your sisters on me.โ
โItโs what you deserve for bringing Zach and the rook he shoved up his ass.โ
โAh, Zach. If only we could know what his FIDE rating is.โ I laugh. โMaybe we should ask him and . . .โ
We walk through the doors, and my voice trails off. The noise in the bustling room dims, then quiets.
People walk around me, past me, into me, but I stand still, frozen, unable to step out of the way.
There are tables. Many tables pushed together to form long, parallel rowsโ rows and rows, covered in white- and- blue cloth with plastic, foldable chairs tucked into each side, and between each pair of chairsโ
Chessboards.
Dozens of them. Hundreds. Not good ones: I can tell even from the entrance that theyโre old and cheap, the pieces chipped and poorly cut, the squares dirty and discolored. Ugly, mismatched sets all around me. The smell in the room is like a childhood memory, made of familiar, simple notes: wood and felt and sweat and stale coffee, the bergamot note of Dadโs aftershave, home, belonging, betrayal, happiness, andโ
โMal? You okay?โ Easton tugs at my arm with a frown. I donโt think itโs the first time sheโs asked.
โYeah. Yeah, I . . .โ I swallow, and it helps. The moment breaks, my heart slows, and Iโm just a girlโperhaps a slightly fawn-kneed one. Itโs just a room that Iโm standing in. The chess piecesโ theyโre just stuff. Things. Some white, some black. Some can move in any number of unoccupied squares, others not so much. Who cares? โI need a drink.โ
โI have Crystal Light. Strawberry.โ She hands me her CamelBak. โItโs disgusting.โ
โGuys.โ Zach comes up to us from behind. โDonโt freak out, but Iโve spotted some preeetty big names walking around. Iโm talking international.โ
Easton lets out an exaggerated gasp. โHarry Styles?โ
โWhat? No.โ
โMalala?โ
โNo.โ
โOh my God, Michelle Obama? Do you think sheโll sign my pocket constitution?โ
โNoโ Rudra Lal. Maxim Alexeyev. Andreas Antonov. Yang Zhang.
Famous chess people.โ
โAh.โ She nods. โSo regular, not-at-all- famous people?โ
I do love watching Easton mess with Zach, but Iย haveย heard these names. I wouldnโt be able to pick them out of a lineup, but at my most fervent, chess- obsessive stage Iโve studied their games on books, simulation software, YouTube tutorials. Old impressions surface quickly in my brain, like long- unused synapses sputtering awake.
Lal: versatile openings, positional Antonov: tricky, but technical Zhang: calculating, slow Alexeyev: still young, uneven
I shrug the memories away and ask, โWhat are they doing at an amateur tournament?โ
โThe directorโs well connected in the chess worldโ sheโs the owner of a respected New York chess club. Plus, the winning team gets twenty thousand for a charity of their choice.โ He rubs his hands together like a cartoon villain. โI hope I get to go against the big guns.โ
โYou think you can beat them?โ Eastonโs eyebrow lifts, skeptical. โArenโt they pros?โ
โWell, Iโve been training.โ Zach brushes nonexistent crumbs off his blazer. โMy ratingโs 2,546โโ we all roll our eyesโ โand Lalโs not exactly at the top of his game. Did you see him lose to Sawyer at Ubud International two weeks ago? It was embarrassing.โ
โEveryoneโs embarrassing against Sawyer,โ Josh points out. โWell, plenty of people are embarrassing againstย me.โ
Eastonโs eye twitches. โAre you comparing yourself to Sawyer?โ โPeople say we have similar playing styles . . .โ
I cough to hide a snort. โDo we know who weโve been paired with yet?โ โSort of.โ Easton unlocks her phone and texts everyone a screenshot of
the organizersโ email. โWe donโt knowย whoย weโre going up against, because itโs a team tournament. But Mal, youโre PCC Player One, and youโve been paired with the Marshall Chess Club Player One. Row five, board thirty- four. Good news: youโre White. Round one starts in five. The time limit is ninety minutes, then round two starts. So we should get going.โ Easton tugs at my hand. โWouldnโt want to make Lal wait for the thorough asskicking heโs about to get, right, Zach?โ
I canโt tell whether Zach recognizes the shade. He puffs up and struts to his board, and Iโm left wondering how soon the black hole of antimatter that is his ego will swallow the solar system.
โListen,โ Easton whispers before we go separate ways, โI put myself in a too- high bracket. Iโll probably be destroyed in about five moves, but itโs okay. All the PCC wanted was for us to have a presence here, and I delivered. Thatโs to say, if you let whoever youโre playing destroy you quickly, we can pop by Dylanโs Candy Bar and be back before round two.โ
โAre you buying?โ โFine.โ
โOne of those macarons stuffed inside a cookie?โ โSure.โ
โDeal.โ
It wonโt be hard, getting checkmated like a total loser, not with how rusty I am. I take a seat at board thirty- four, White side, and watch the chairs around me fill up, people shaking hands, the introduction and chitchatting as everyone waits for the start announcement. No one is paying attention to me, and . . . I just do it.
I reach for my king. Pick it up. Feel its slight, perfect weight in my hand and smile softly as I trace the corners of the crown.
The stupid, useless, good- for- nothing king. Can barely move one square, scurries into hiding behind the rook, and heโs so, so easy to corner. A fraction of the queenโs power, thatโs what he has. He is nothing, absolutelyย nothing, without his kingdom.
My heart squeezes. At least heโs relatable.
I put the king back on his square and stare at the skyline made up by the piecesโ the trivial and yet monumental landscape of chess. Itโs more familiar than the view from my childhood bedroom (unspectacular: a busted trampoline, lots of ornery squirrels, an apricot tree that never learned how to bear fruit). Itโs more familiar than my own face in the mirror, and I canโt tear my gaze away, not even when the chair in front of mine drags across the floor, not even when one of the tournament directors calls for round one to begin.
The table shifts as my opponent takes a seat. A large hand stretches into my line of sight. And just as Iโm about to force myself out of my reverie to shake it, I hear a deep voice say,
โMarshall Chess Club Player One. Nolan Sawyer.โ