โIn the Fyre Festival reenactment that is my life, I should probably not find any of this surprising. But evenย Iย cannot believeโ simplyย cannotย believe, that I began playing chess three weeks ago, and Iโm already involved in drama.โ
Honestly: what the hell?
People are tweeting about you, Defne whispered a few minutes ago.
This is a sham. Everyoneโs on your side.
I nodded blindly, nauseously grateful that neither my mom (too sensible), nor Darcy (too young), nor Sabrina (too TikTok) are on Twitter. I should have gotten myself a chess nom de plume. Quinn Von Rook. Horsie McCastle. Knighterella Black.
โShe won.โ Defne, who introduced herself as my trainer to the tournament director, has been championing me for the past ten minutes. I stand by her side, barely following the conversation.
โShe did, yes,โ the director says, lookingย May I have some fentanyl?ย levels of pained. He moved the conversation off the stage, ostensibly to be away from the cameras, but the press circles around us like piranhas.
This chess drama Iโm involved in? Itโs apparentlyย televised.
โBut thereย areย rules,โ the director continues, โand one of these rules is that nothing but the moves should be annotated on the scorecard. And Ms. Greenleaf wrote and, um, drew several things on hers, andโ โ
โCome on, Russel.โ Clearly, he and Defne go way back. โItโs her first tournamentโ she had no idea.โ
โNevertheless, her opponent has complained. As is his right.โ
Ten pairs of eyes turn to Koch, who surveys us placidly from the height of his Smirking Personality Disorder. He has the upper hand, and I want to parboil him and feed him to the New Jersey tree frogs.
โWhat even is the purpose of the no-doodling rule?โ I ask Defne under my breath.
โTo prevent players smuggling in notes that might help against their opponent. Butโโ she raises her voiceโ โitโs a rule that hasnโt been enforced in ages. Itโs like thoseย No eating fried chicken with a forkย laws!โ
โWhatย wasย she drawing?โ Sawyer asks, deep voice almost lazy.
Because to make things cherry-on-top unpleasant, Nolan Sawyer and his managerโ a sharp- looking redhead in her thirtiesโ are part of this conversation. He stands tall, arms crossed on his chest, black blazer over a white button- down open at the collar.ย Stupidly attractive, an unwelcome, inopportune voice inside me blathers.
I quash it silent.
At least seeing Sawyer interact with Koch is tangible proof that he absolutely abhors him. Iโm still not sure how he feels about me, but even if he hates me, Iโm a distant number two in his disaffections.
โHere.โ Defne holds my scorecard to him, and I flush.
โI fail to see how doodling aโโhe looks at the margin of my sheet; his eyebrow archesโ โ cat helped her win the match.โ
โItโs a guinea pig,โ I mutter, and get a dozen dirty looks for my effort. โUnfortunately, the rule is phrased broadly,โ Russel explains. โI
wouldnโt enforce it if it were up to me, but if Ms. Greenleafโs opponentโ Mr. Kochโ asks us to do so . . .โ
โThis is bullshit.โ Sawyer returns the sheet, unimpressed.
โWhat, Sawyer?โ Koch says. The smirking intensifies. โYou scared Iโm going to beat you?โ
Is this the reason Sawyer is siding with me on this? Because he considers me the least dangerous opponent? Tendrils of disappointment curl
in my belly, but I remind myself that I donโt careโ about chess, or about the man- boys who play it.ย Faking. Iโm faking this.
โJust shut the fuck up, Koch,โ Sawyers drawls, more annoyed than angry, like Koch is a mosquito heโs swatting away. โIf you eliminate Mallory,โ he says, like he has a right to my name, like he can say a word and make me blush, โI wonโt play.โ
Russel pales. Having the best player step away from your tournament is probably not a good look. โIf you forfeit, Mr. Koch will automatically win first prize.โ
โSounds good to me,โ Koch says.
Sawyer is silent for a moment. Then he shakes his head bitterly. His jaw clenches, and I expect him to do what heโs known for: Yell. Make a scene. Break some stuff.
He doesnโt, though. He turns to me with a long, unreadable look. Then mutters, โI hate this shit,โ and starts up the stage, taking his place once more.
Russel deflates with relief. I barely resist the temptation to trip Koch as he follows Sawyer up the stage.
โGross,โ Defne tells me. Her eyes are on the live- feed monitors as the match commences. โWhat a douchebag.โ
โYeah. Honestly, we should leave. I donโt want to watch Koch play . . .
Wait. Whatโs Sawyer doing?โ
He moves his queen knight in a weird pattern. Forward and back, and then again. A bunch of useless, silent movesโ while Koch mounts an attack in earnest. With White.
โHeโs . . .โ Defneโs grin unfurls slowly. โOh, Nolan. You little shit.โ โWhatโs he doing?โ
โGiving Koch a two- moves odds.โ โWhatโs that?โ
She covers her laugh with one hand. The room is a mess of whispers. โHeโs telling Koch that he can beat him, even with a handicap.โ
โThatโs . . .โ
โSome serious shade.โ
โAnd reckless. I mean . . . what if he loses?โ
He doesnโt. Lose, that is. He wins in a number of moves that can only be described as embarrassingโ mostly for Koch, whoโs still flushed with rage during the awards ceremony, when Russel the Tournament Director Whoโs About to Develop a Drinking Problem hands Sawyer a fifty- thousand- dollar check.
My eyes bulge out so hard, Iโll probably need surgery. โFiftyย thousand
dollars?โ
โWell, itโs just an open tournament,โ Defne explains. โI know itโs small, butโ โ
โItโs a bucketload of money!โ I nearly choke on my saliva. I hadnโt expected the prizes to be this high. Whatย isย this, OnlyFans?
I canโt help following Sawyerโs movements as he nips off the stage. The press immediately crowds him, starts asking questions, but a raised hand from him has them instantly backing off, like theyโre alarmed by this historically mercurial, unpredictable twenty- year- old. And then . . .
Then, a beautiful girl with long black hair runs toward him, and heโs hugging her. I see her laugh, I see him half smile, I see him drape an arm over her shoulder and head for the exit. I look away, because . . . wouldnโt want to meet his eyes and end up with my soul devoured. Iโm musing over how miserable his girlfriend must be, what with the temper and Baudelaire rumors, when a dark- haired young woman in a BBC badge approaches me. I open my mouth to sayย No,ย pleaseย no, donโt make me do this, donโt make me give an interview, but she talks first. โMallory? Iโm Eleni Gataki. Itโs so nice to meet you.โ
โI donโt really . . .โ
She follows my gaze to her badge. โIโm not here forโ Iโm just an intern.โ
โOh.โ I relax.
โWell, for now. I hope one day Iโll get to cover chess for the BBC. Anyway, I just wanted to let you know, your play at this tournament wasย amazing. Iโm already a fan! Between us, the BBCโs current chess correspondent is a boring old- school guy who only writes about the same
three dudes, but Iโm going to try to pitch my first article about you. Well, notย youย you, but your chess style. Itโs so engaging and entertaining!โ
Iโm bewildered by her enthusiasm. With no clue how to reply, Iโm almost relieved when Russel interrupts us and asks for a moment alone. โSo sorry about earlier.โ He hands me an envelope. โHere is the semifinalist prize.โ
I open it, expecting . . . Iโm not sure. A brochure on how to effectively use the Sicilian Defense. A coupon for two hours of counseling with a sports psychologist.ย Lilo & Stitchย stickers.
Notย a check. For ten thousand dollars.
Itโs clearly a mistake. And yet my first greedy, ugly instinct is to pocket it. Conceal it. Abscond with it.
I want this money. Oh, the things I could do with it. I could be zero months behind with our mortgage. Set up a savings account. Pay for my auto- mechanic certifications. Say yes to Darcy and Sabrina next time they ask for whatever trivial crap theyโve fallen in covet with. Roller skates. Slime. Piano lessons. A cotton- top tamarin plushie.
God,ย howย I want this money. So much so, I need to get rid of it.
Immediately.
โI have to tell you something,โ I say to Defne. Sheโs washing her hands in the unsurprisingly deserted ladiesโ restroom. โIโ They gave me a check. By mistake, I think. Ten thousand.โ
โItโs the semifinalist prize.โ She briefly struggles with the soap dispenser. โDidnโt you see the info on the tournament website?โ
There is a tournament website?ย โI . . .โ I blink.ย Ten. Thousand. Dollars.ย Oh God. Butโ I canโt. It should go to her. โHere.โ I hold the check out. โYou sponsored me. You have it.โ
โNuh-uh. Youย earnedย it. Though you might have to pay taxes on it.
Check with your accountant.โ
My accountant.ย Right. The one currently on vacation in Seychelles with my hedge fund manager.
โIโll go get the car so we can head home, but Mal.โ She gives me a loaded look. โThe prize for the World Championship is two million dollars.
The Challengers, a hundred thousand. Just making sure you know, since you hate tournament websites.โ She leaves with a wink, and I stare down at my check for a long time.
Plan Fake Your Way Through Chess is going to need some serious reworking.