There are two main distinctions between the Olympics and a regular tournament: we get doping- tested (yup: it involves peeing in a cup), and we compete as a team. We still play all our matches individually, but our points will be added together. As the strongest among us, Nolan is first board. But then , the least experienced player, am chosen for second. (I ask Emil repeatedly if itâs a good idea. He gives me a wide- eyed look and huffs, âCome on, Greenleaf.â)
It feels different, knowing that whatever victory I manage to bring home will be for â no matter how temporary and abstract this might be. Itâs nice when Emil high- fives me after I win on time against the Estonian player, or Tanu kisses my forehead because I narrowly avoided a draw with Singapore. I donât even mind Nolanâs long, thoughtful, lingering looks. He always defeats his opponent quickly. Then he finds something warm to drink for the rest of the team, sets it by our boards, and comes to stand somewhere behind my opponent. His eyes alternate between me and my game, dark and focused and greedy in a way I donât fully understand.
He doesnât fist- pump when I win. He doesnât even tell me that I did good. He just nods once, like every single one of my victories is expected and his faith in me is as solid as a boulder. As though he couldnât marvel at me playing well any more than at the sun setting at night.
The pressure that comes with it should be irritating. But I find the unwavering confidence from a player of his caliber flattering, which irritates me even more. So I do what Iâm best at: I avoid thinking about it.
And itâs not hard. Toronto is beautiful, and the tournament atmosphere is fun: backpacks, players sitting on the floor and unwrapping homemade sandwiches, people who havenât seen each other in years hugging it out between rounds. Itâs youthful and low pressure, like a school trip with excellent chess instead of museums. I wear jeans and an oversized sweater without feeling underdressed.
âDonât get cocky, though. Weâve been lucky so far,â Emil tells me while walking back to the hotel at the end of the first day. Nolan is giving Tanu a piggyback ride, because âWe havenât met any of the strongest teams.â
âWhich are?â
âChina, India, Russia. And, like, twelve more.â
âWhoâs the current champion, by the way?â
âGermany. But they wonât be strong this year, with Koch already in Moscow.â
â
why the North American continent felt so much more pleasant than usual,â Nolan mutters.
âIs your manager still pissed about you coming to the Olympics?â Emil asks.
âCanât say, since I stopped taking her calls.â He shrugs.
It has Tanu giggling on his shoulders and asking, âRemember years ago, when you pushed Koch and manhandled him a bit and he started calling for his mom?â
âOne of my most treasured memories.â
âThe tears. The panic. Totally worth that fine FIDE slapped you with.â
âWhy you punch him?â I ask, though I can imagine a million reasons.
âCanât really recall,â Nolan murmurs, almost too casually.
âHe was talking about your grandfather,â Tanu says. âAs usual.â
âAh, yes.â His jaw tightens. âHe does enjoy running his mouth about shit he doesnât know.â
Weâre staying in a hostel, four separate bedrooms that converge into a shared living space and bathroom. Last night I wondered how Nolan, Mr. Fifty Thousand Dollars Is Nothing to Me, felt about it, but if he finds the accommodation subpar, he hasnât mentioned it. I went to bed early, and then spent hours listening to the soft, intimate tones of the others chatting, feeling vaguely jealous. I texted Easton (Howâs life? Are you puking your heart out in a toilet bowl?) and scrolled through her TikTok waiting for a reply that never came.
Sheâs busy. Itâs fine.
After the first day I conk out on the couch before dinner, before I can even call home. Itâs a dreamless, exhausted, happy kind of sleep, vague impressions of bishops and rooks gliding softly across a large board. I wake up tucked in my bed, still wearing yesterdayâs clothes. Someone took off my shoes, connected my phone to the charger, put a glass of water on my bedside. Someone took care of me.
I donât ask who.
Day two is more of the same. In the morning, we win all of our matchesâ with the exception of Emil, who loses against Sierra Leone.
âWay to kill our streak, asshole,â Nolan tells him mildly over some lunch poutine, ducking to avoid the fry Emil throws at him.
Tanu nods. âTold you we should have brought along someone who knows how to castle.â Unfortunately, ducks too slowly.
Nolan gestures at me with his chin. âItâs your turn, Mallory.â
âMy turn?â
âTo tear into Emil. Itâs tradition.â
âRight.â I swallow a cheese curd. Scratch my nose. âEmil, that was, um . . . badly done?â
Nolan shakes his head. âPitiful.â
âReally, Mal?â Tanu chides. âIs this the best you can do?â
âClearly Malâs as good at trash-talking as I was at playing against Sierra Leone.â
âShe has other talents,â Nolan says, locking eyes with mine. âLike drawing guinea pigs.â
I hide my smile in my hand, but Iâm feeling more comfortable with these three. Nolan is more approachable when consumed through the Brita filter of his friends, even if thereâs still something intimidating about his unignorable, often quiet presence. Something that keeps me on edge.
As our opponents get stronger, we accumulate more losses and draws, mostly from Tanu and Emil. I like to winâ I to winâ but my teammatesâ defeats donât bother me as much, and Nolan seems to be the same. On the second match of the third day, Jakub SzymaÅski from Poland blunders ten moves in, and I pull off a victory in record time. I blink away the soupy feeling of emerging from a game, stretch a little, then come to stand right behind Nolan.
Itâs the first time Iâve finished before himâ the first time I get to watch him play. Itâs his turn to move, and he sits back in the chair, neck slightly bent, arms on his chest. Then he moves his rook, large hands incongruously graceful, and presses the clock.
I have yet to study his games. Defne chooses what plays I analyze, and Iâve found none of Nolanâs in my list. Still, itâs impossible to know anything about chess without having some theoretical notions about him as a player: he is famously cunning, aggressive, versatile. Active. Always doing something risky to raise the pressure. His strategies might seem impulsive, spontaneous, but they are long- sighted and convoluted, nearly impossible to thwart. He relentlessly exploits every advantage, position, distraction. I remember reading about a quality of chess players called : the ability to not just play well but also others into playing poorly. Nolan, by all accounts, has it in heaps. And when the adversary has blundered their way into the middle game, he sinks his teeth into them and draws blood.
The Kingkiller, indeed.
I watch him at work as he advances, surrounds the center, moves his knight and bishop in tandem, takes everything on his path, and . . .
I feel breathless. Light-headed. Confused. Thatâs how beautiful his moves are. Cruel and unstoppable. I won against him once, but I also know I might not win againâheâs good. And thereâs more: Iâm a practical player, always focused on finishing off my opponent as quickly as possible rather than on the art and elegance of the game. But Nolanâs play is stunning. In five thousand years archaeologists will cry at its grace. Though if we donât stop carbon emissions, the world will just be a pile of ashes, so maybe we should put it in a time capsule. Send it into space on an alien probe. Share with the rest of the universeâ
âYou okay?â Tanu asks.
âIâ yes.â I hadnât noticed her. Even though sheâs right beside me.
âYou looked . . . entranced.â
âNo. I was just . . .â
âYeah, Nolanâs play will do that. Nolan, in general.â She laughs softly. âI used to be so in love with him, Iâd thought Iâd die if we didnât get married and have four chubby kids named after opening gambits no one uses anymore.â My eyes widen. âOh, donât worry. I was, like, twelve? And he couldnât have cared less about that stuff.â She shrugs. âI thought he was incapable of caring at all before . . . well. On paper, he should have of game, but in reality he has very little.â She smiles reassuringly. I want to ask her why she assumes that Iâd worry, or what means, but Nolan buries his fangs into the Polish king and Tanu is too busy cheering.
Iâm in a good mood until the last match of the dayâ Serbia. Because some chess divinity hates me, their second board is someone I remember from Kochâs crew back at Philly Openâ Dordevic, the name tag informs me, and I suddenly recall what he asked me that night.
âGreenleaf,â he says, his sneer a clear sign of Koch affiliation.
I vow to myself to destroy him. And Iâm true to my word for the first forty minutes or so, easily blocking his attacks and gaining control of the center. Until he takes a page from Kochâs Little Bitch Manual, and accuses me of making an illegal move.
âItâs not,â I tell him.
âIf you previously moved the rookâ â
âBut I didnât.â
âArbiter!â
I roll my eyes but let him flag the closest officialâ a blond woman who nods and walks over to us.
I recognize her immediately. My stomach flips, then freezes into a block of concrete that should drag me through the floor. Instead, snippets of a four- year- old conversation swarm my head.
âYes?â she asks Dordevic, and thereâs a pounding roar in my ears. I know everything about herâ name, age, even her address. Or at least, a few years agoâs. Itâs possible that she moved. That she doesnât work at the bank anymore, that she doesnât exercise at Pure Barre, thatâ
âItâs not illegal,â she tells Dordevic, who starts gesticulating his disagreement. My entire body is shaking, and I canât tune in.
âAre you okay?â a voice asks in my ear. Nolan. He just finished his game. âMal?â
I thrust a trembling hand out to Dordevic. âDraw?â I offer. Itâs the first time.
His expression shifts from confused, to distrustful, to relieved when he accepts. We both know that if weâd continued, Iâd have won, butâ I canât. Not now.
âNot such a good talent, after all?â He sniggers. Iâm already running to the bathroom when I hear Nolan calling him a shithead.
I wash my face, shuddering. I remind myself that itâs fine, because nothing happened. It was years ago.
âWhatâs wrong?â Nolan asks the second I step out of the bathroom. Heâs been waiting for me, and I nearly face- plant into his chest.
âI . . . Sorry about the draw.â
âI donât care. Who was that arbiter?â
Shit. He noticed. âNo one. I just . . .â I step around him, but one hand closes around my upper arm.
âMallory. Youâre not okay. What just happened?â His tone is firm.
But so is mine. âI need a minute, Nolan. Can you pleaseâ â
âMr. Sawyer?â A group of players approaches us. âWeâre huge fans. Any chance we could get an autographâ â
I seize the opportunity and slip away from Nolan, from Heather Turcotte, from chess. At the hostel, I lock myself into my room, lie down, take deep breaths to clear my mind.
No.
I empty my mind again, this time for good, and slowly fall into a dreamless, blessed sleep.
I wake up in the middle of the night, feeling more like myself. When I sneak out to use the bathroom, I find a brown bag outside my door. Inside are a sandwich, a Fanta, and a pack of Twizzlers.