Darcy loves the guinea pig hoodie I bought her (âthough itâs a copout, as Goliath will not want to copulate with a 2D piggyâ) and even Sabrina is impressed with her new maple leaf skates that I almost missed my plane to buy and nearly couldnât fit into my luggage.
But her love for me comes and goes. âYouâre the best!â she tells me on Wednesday, after I give her a ride to McKenzieâs. But on Thursday, when I find her crying in the living room over something McKenzie posted on social media, itâs âWhy do you have to be so ? Why canât you mind your own business?â
âIf they find my corpse in a ditch,â I say to Mom, âtell the police not to look into her. She probably did it, but I donât want her to spend her life in prison.â
âItâs not just you. Sheâs mad at the entire world.â
âWas I this intense at fourteen?â Itâs such a ridiculous question. Iâm still eighteen, but I feel as ancient as the lady from . Except when I compare myself with Easton and feel stuck in some pubescent stage.
âI once asked you to stop leaving the peanut butter jar open, and you called me a dictator.â
I groan. âWill Darcy be like this, too?â
âYup.â She pats my shoulder. âThough sheâll leave the Nutella open.â
All in all, though, I come back from my trip to the puzzling revelation that no life- threatening emergencies occurred, and that without me, my family . . . did just fine. Iâm half shocked, half relieved.
Oz and Defne are at the Pasternak, which means that Iâm mostly unsupervised. I should use the extra time to catch up on the GarcÃa Márquez readathon I signed up for on Goodreads, memorize the world capitals, dye my hair vomit green. Anything, really. Instead, I study Nolanâs games.
The fury of our last night in Toronto has settled into cold resentment. Nolan said lots of things about me, some of which were correctâ by pure coincidence. Broken clock, twice a day. Still, he had no right. His question game was stupid. I hope to never see him again. Probably wonât.
But I do want to study the aggravating masterpieces that are his games, and my hands itch to pull them up on the chess engine. I revel in his delicious ability to wear down his opponents, deprive them of active play, and then strike like a tiger. Iâm developing a more- than- mild obsession, and thatâs probably why Iâm thinking of him when I match up with a guy named Alex on an app on Sunday night.
Hey!
love the dog in your profile pic, is he a pitbull?
My phone immediately pings with a reply, but for several minutes Iâm too distracted with lying back on the couch and analyzing the Sawyer variation for the Berlin Defense to check it.
Yup. How have you been?
How have I ? Thatâs kind of a weird question. I scroll back to his profile pic, thinking that he looks a bit familiar. Heâs cute. Dark hair. Dark eyes. Not that dark, though. Not as dark as . . .
have we met before?
Are you kidding?
Nope. Not kidding. Thankfully, he reminds me before I have to admit it.
We went to school together. I was a year ahead of you. I asked you to junior prom.
Oh.
Alexâ except, now he has facial hair. I do remember. Heâd been so . . . bland. Probably why I havenât really thought about him since.
sorry, i didnât recognize your pic. howâve you been?
Good! Iâm at Rutgers. What about you?
iâm not in school Taking a year off? It suits you, from your profile pic. You were always really hot, but now . . .
The next text is three fire emojis. Given the reason Iâm on this app, I should probably find it flattering instead of . . . blah.
Instead, I wonder how Nolan would do this. Be online. Hook up. Poorly, probably. Isnât he a virgin? Useless in the sack.
But itâs so hard to picture him doing anything poorly. With his dark, attentive eyes; the precise, purposeful way his large hands close around the chess pieces; his voice, always so careful; his beautiful, brilliant strategies. Heâd murmur indiscernible words under his breath at the Olympics, when he made a mistake or regretted a move. Sometimes the hairs at the nape of my neck would rise, and it shouldnât have been pleasant, but Iâ
My phone pings again and I look at it, startled. I forgot it was in my hand.
Do you want to meet sometime soon, catch up?
Hook up, he means. Though heâs being appropriately subtle about it. I bet Nolan wouldnât be nearly as low- key. I bet heâd say something like âto have sexual intercourseâ andâ
Oh God.
Oh .
actually, probably better not. iâm way too busy with work, shouldnât even be online. so sorry to waste your time.
I silence my phone, and when it vibrates with Alexâs response, I donât bother checking it. Why the hell am I thinking about Nolan right now, while setting up a meeting with another person? Why is he in my head?
Thatâs it. Iâm done. This is upsetting. Confusing. Stupid. Unprecedented. No more Nolan games. No more Nolan. I need toâ I canât keep thinking about him.
, I tell myself as I wait for the shower jet to warm up enough.
.
I actually believe it. Until tomorrow happens.
THE PIECE IS IN Which is a problem in and of itself, as Iâm out of free articles for the month. It means that when Easton texts it to me (Are you hooking up with him? Good to know I have to find out about my BFFâs life from Vanity Fair!!!), I can see the title (Sawyer places second at Pasternak invitational, draws to Koch in volatile final match) and nothing else.
I just woke up after tossing and turning all night. Outside itâs still dark, the glow from my phone pierces my bleary eyes, and Goliath is proudly licking his butthole somewhere by my left ear.
I really do hate my life.
donât have access to the article. tl;dr?
how are you, by the way? did a sasquatch capture you and make you her bride?
You WANT to read this.
im poor and i hate jeff bezos.
Thatâs the and USE INCOGNITO MODE jeez whatâs wrong with you. Boomer.
Incognito mode works, and how did I not know about that? Iâm wondering how to exploit this newfound knowledge when the first paragraph of the article catches my eyes.
I click on the link, which brings me to Page Fucking Six. Itâs a photo of Nolan and me on our last night in Toronto, playing tic- tactoe in a semi- dark room. My head is bent, pencil in hand. Heâs staring at me, an oddly soft expression on his usually unreadable face.
Who took this? When?
Oh, fuck. No no . Oh, fuckity fuck fuck.
I spring out of bed. This is bad. Badder than bad.
.
What do I do? How do I ask for a retraction from ? Do they have a manager I can pull a Karen with?
Nolan. Nolan will know. Heâll want to fix this, too. I need to get in touch with him, but how? I donât have his number. Do I summon him with a pentagram made of rooks, orâ Emil!
I text him, then remember his schedule back in Toronto:
a morning person. Who knows when heâll wake up, and I canât wait that long when someone is wrong about me on the internet. So I run a hand through my hair and do what anyone else would: I google Nolan. I have to comb through more results than anyone whoâs barely twenty years old should have, including a Tumblr of him as a cat, and explicit erotic fanfiction of him and Percy Jackson sixty- nining on a hippocampus. Then find something useful: an article about Nolan emancipating himself from his family and moving into a Tribeca penthouse.
And because the internet is a scary place that doesnât believe in boundaries, there is an address.
Apparently I donât believe in boundaries, either: Iâm going there to talk to Nolan. Itâll take over an hour. By then Emil will have replied, and Iâll text Nolan that Iâm in the area. Letâs get Starbucks to talk about chess and a possible defamation lawsuit to a major news outlet! Coffeeâs on me! Perfect plan.
Made only slightly less perfect by the fact that I find myself in the lobby of Nolanâs building, and Emil still wonât reply or take my calls. Because heâs still asleep. The doorman takes a look at the oversized sweater I threw over my most boho dress and is ready to eject me from the building.
I smile shakily. âIâm here to see Mr. Sawyer.â
The doormanâs expression clearly says, . It makes me want to die a bit.
âPlease?â
âIâm under instruction not to let up unexpected visitors.â
âBut I . . .â An idea occurs to me. It makes me want to die a lot. âHe just came back from Russia and I wanted to surprise him, because Iâm his . . .â
. âGirlfriend. See?â
Two minutes later Iâm on the fourth floor, thinking Nolan needs way better security, when he opens the door.
I fully expected to word- vomit at him and demand that he ask his . . . publicist? Press team? Masseuse? That he ask to fix this shitshow. But when heâs standing in front of me, hair wild, skin pasty white, white tee and plaid pajama pants rumpled from the mattress, I cannot help but say . . .
âYou look like death.â
âMallory?â He rubs the heel of his palm in his eye. His voice is hoarse with sleep and something else. âAnother dream, huh?â
âNolanâ are you okay?â
âYou should come to bed. This is a stupid setup. I like it much better when weâ â
âNolan, are you ?â
He blinks. His expression clears. âAre you here?â
â
. Whatâs wrong with you?â
He scratches his nape and sinks into the doorjamb, like orthostatic balance is not something he has fully mastered. âNot sure,â he mumbles. âEither everything or nothing.â
Nolanâs apartment is a duplex three times larger than my house, a giant expanse of uncluttered spaces, wide windows, hardwood floors, and bookshelves. In the middle of the hallway thereâs an open suitcase, abandoned; on a nearby table, a stack of books that include Emily Dickinson, Donna Tartt, and a monograph on the Macedonian phalanx; all over, the deep, complex scent Iâve come to associate with Nolanâ but better. Stronger. Deconstructed in its separate layers.
I follow him as he leads somewhere he forgot to say, trying not to be nosy about his space, not to stare at the cotton clinging to his wide shoulders. Itâs odd, being here. Like the peculiar atmosphere that every room exudes as soon as Nolan Sawyers enters it has been distilled, condensed, poured over the walls and the floors.
This impromptu trip might not have been a wise decision. âDo you have a fever?â I ask in the kitchen.
âImpossible to tell.â
I arch my eyebrow. âLet me tell you about thermometer technology.â
âAh, yeah. I forgot.â Thing is, I donât even think heâs being a smart-ass. I watch him grab two regular-sized mugs that look almost comically small in his hands (one says ), a box of Froot Loops, a half- drunk gallon of milk thatâs visibly curdled. He offers me the non- Emil mug like itâs a whiskey shot.
âNolan, youâ â I push up my toes to reach his forehead. Heâs . This close, he smells like sleep and fresh sweat. Not unpleasant.
âYour hand is so cool,â he says, closing his eyes in relief.
I make to take it away, but he traps it under his. âStay.â He leans into me, breath warm, chapped lips against my temple. âYou never stay.â
âNolan, youâre ill. We have to do something about it.â
âRight. Yes.â He straightens away from me. âBreakfast. Will be like new after.â
âAfter ? You need nutrients, not food coloring in microdonut shape.â
âItâs all I have.â
âSeriously?â
He shrugs. âI was gone somewhere. Canada?â
âYou were in Russia. Also, you have a stack of bowls in that credenzaâ who has cereal in a mug?â
âOh.â He nods. Then collapses slowly, until his forehead rests on the kitchen island. âWhoâs Credence?â
I pinch the bridge of my nose. Iâm a good person. I pick up Mrs. Abebeâs garbage can when the wind tips it over, smile at the dogs at the park, never make fun of people who say . I donât this. And yet. âListen, stay here. Donât eat that. Iâll be right back.â
I half carry him to the couch, his solid muscles heavy and scorching hot against me. In less than ten minutes, I run downstairs, spend a small European countryâs GDP at the corner bodega, and come back up to find him sleeping.
Iâm Mother Teresa. Reincarnated. I need a halo for my trouble.
âTake this.â Nolanâs couch is a giant sectional but still too short for him. Ridiculous.
âIs it poison?â
âRapid- release ibuprofen.â
âWhatâs that smell?â
âYour armpits.â
âNo, the good one.â
âIâm cooking.â
His eyes spring open. âYouâre making chicken soup.â
âWhich you do not deserve.â
âFrom scratch?â
âItâs really easy, and canned stuff tastes like lead poisoning and despair. By the way, you owe me forty- three dollars. Yes, Iâm charging you for the emotional- support Snickers bar I bought for myselfâ you can Venmo, but please donât write in the memo line. Just . . . take a nap. Iâll be back.â
He doesnât, though. Take a nap. He sits at the kitchen island and watches me in a glazed- over, pleased way as I move around quietly. It doesnât bother me, really. His eyes on me usually do strange, uncomfortable things, but today . . . maybe I just love this kitchen. Itâs large and cozy and modern, and I want to use it every day. I want to common- law marry it and adopt an entire pack of incontinent shar- peis with it.
âWhy are you here?â he asks twenty minutes later. With the meds kicking in, he seems a little less out of it.
âThere is this article in ,â I explain absentmindedly while chopping carrots. Now that Iâm here, taking care of Nolan in his warm apartment that smells like him and comfort food, itâs hard to scrounge up the level of indignation I felt one hour ago. âAbout you losing to Koch.â
âI with Koch. But I did lose to Liu, who in turn won to Oblonsky, and I tied with Antonov, so I placed second at the tournamentâ â
âYes, Iâm sure your dick is longer than Kochâs, but letâs focus on the matter at hand, which is that Koch told that you and I are dating, and Page Six published pics of us in Toronto, and now whatever small nerdy percentage of the world cares about chess thinks that we have a thing.â
âAnd we donât?â
I turn to glare at him. âYou donât have . You told me so.â
âI also said âuntil recently.â â
My heart skips a beat. âYou should be way more upset about this. Since youâre on your deathbed, Iâll let that slide, but weâll have to set the record straight.â
âSure. Feel free.â
âWhat does that mean? Together. Weâll do it together. We can release a press statement. Invest in skywriting.
.â
âI wonât. But you can.â
I scowl. âWhat do you mean, you wonât? My sister, my friends, theyâll read the article and think itâs true.â
âIâm happy to text your friends, or FaceTime them, or skywrite at them to explain the situation. But I wonât talk about my personal life to the press.â
âWhy?â
âMal, I understand that this is upsetting, but itâs not the first time this has happened to me. Thereâs no way to fight the press when theyâre wrong. You can only ignore it. First rule of Chess Club: never google yourself.â
I cover the soup with a lid and lean against the counter, arms crossed. âPretty sure the first rule of Chess Club is White moves first. And I understand you were burned by the Baudelaire rumor, butâ â
âI was referring to the shit they printed about my grandfather.â He gives me a vacuous look. âWhatâs the Baudelaire rumor?â
I look away. Embarrassing, that I know of it and he doesnât. Makes it sound like I care more about his love life than he does. âJust . . . people said you dated a Baudelaire?â
âOh, yeah. The sisters, right? Emil told me about it.â
âIs it true?â
His eyebrow lifts. âYou know it isnât.â
Right. I do. âHow did the rumor start, then?â
âOne of them was at some party my manager made me go to, back when I still listened to her. That was probably enough.â
I lean my elbows on the island, hating how interested I am. âWhich Baudelaire?â
âName started with a , I think?â
I sigh. They all have names. âSo, what happened? You were talking and you didnât want to . . . you know.â
âWould you?â
âIf it were me? Hell yeah.â
He tilts his head. âWhy would you?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWhat would you get out of it?â
I shrug. âI like sex. Itâs fun. It feels goodâ
good, sometimes. Especially when youâre in the mood and you do it with attractive or interesting people. Iâm not ashamed of it.â
âYou shouldnât be,â he says, but I can tell that he doesnât completely get it. That sex, desire, are something heâs still wrapping his head around. âWhat about feeling closer to someone? Making a connection?â
âMaybe. Iâm sure sex means different things to different people, and theyâre all valid.â I swat the memory of last night and Alex away, like itâs a fruit fly. âBut the human connection part . . . thatâs not why do it. Itâs risky.â
âRisky? How?â
I shrug, not about to explain. âI donât need that stuff. Iâm busy enough.â
He nods like he knows. âTaking care of your family, right?â
I arch an eyebrow. âWerenât we talking about your Baudelaire affair?â
âI donât really remember what happened. Weâ Wait.â
âWhat?â I lean closer, wide eyed.
âKasparov was there.â
âThe former world champion?â
âYes. He wanted to play with me.â
âAnd?â
âWhat do you mean, and? I went to play.â
âLet me get this straight. You chose playing chess with an old man over getting laid?â
He looks at me like heâs a cloistered nun and Iâm explaining Bitcoin to him. âDid you get that it was ?â
I laugh. Then I laugh again. Then I laugh some more, forehead against my palms, thinking that when heâs not a total dick, Nolan is actually kind of cute. When I look up, he has taken a strand of my hair and is rubbing it between his fingertips like itâs mulberry silk. His eyes are still a bit glassy, so I let him.
âWas it at least the best game of your life?â I ask.
He stares into my eyes. âNo. It wasnât.â
âWhich one was, then?â
More staring. A stray shiver travels up my spine, coming from who knows where. Then the kitchen timer rings, and we both glance away.
I put the soup in his Emilâs Little Bitch mug because itâs a mental image I deserve to have.
âThis is good,â he says after the first spoonful, sounding offensively surprised. âNot as good as your momâs meat loaf, butâ â
I pinch him on the biceps, where thereâs almost no yield because his muscles strain the sleeves of his T-shirt, and his lopsided smile appears. He has four helpings, which he eats boyishly while I munch on my Snickers and pretend not to be flattered. My adrenaline high is coming down, and my body is starting to remember that I have given it fewer than five hours of sleep and no caffeine.
âDo you cook?â I ask distractedly.
âRarely. And mediocrely.â
âAnd yet, you have the best kitchen Iâve ever seen.â I shake my head. âThe money one can earn from tournaments is a bit obscene.â
âIt is, but I was a trust- fund baby. Iâll let you decide if thatâs more or less morally vile.â
âNice of your parents.â
âMy grandfather,â he corrects. âHe used to own this apartment.â
âOh.â I bite my lip, thinking whether I want to ask. âWas that your grandfather who . . .â
âYup. Who played chess and went crazy and almost got me killed when I was thirteen.â His smile is small, not as bitter as Iâd have expected. I wince anyway.
âNot the best way to talk about mental health,â I say neutrally.
âRight. My grandfather, who was diagnosed with rapiddecline behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia. Does that sound better?â I donât reply. Then he adds, âThere is a familial variant of frontotemporal dementia, did you know?â
I open my mouth, then I close it. Thereâs a faraway feeling to him that seems to have little to do with his fever. I should tread carefully.
Nolan Sawyer, needing care. Sounds fake. But.
âAre you afraid itâll happen to you?â
He huffs out a humorless laugh. âYou know whatâs funny? I used to be terrified of it, but I know it wonât. Because I got genetic testing as soon as I emancipated. But my father, as far as I know, did not get tested, and until I stopped taking his calls, he told me every day, every day, that if I kept playing chess, Iâd end up like my grandfather. As though thatâs what his problem was: he played too much chess.â
âThat seems . . . foolish.â
âYeah, well. Foolish people will say foolish things.â
Heâs not meeting my eyes. He stares down into his empty mug, elbows on the marble counter, and I feel myself leaning closer. Nolan seems raw, and I donât want to risk touching him, but Iâd like to be . With him.
Itâs something I do with Easton, when sheâs feeling down. Darcy. Sabrina, when she lets me. Get a little closer than is polite. Share the same air. Let our scents mix together. I do it for my sisters and my friend, and now for this stupid overgrown world chess champion that Iâm apparently nursing back to health.
Weirdos, both of us.
âThis apartment he left you . . . Itâs big for one person,â I murmur.
âWant to move in?â His tone matches mine, intimate.
âSure. Iâll sell my pancreas. It should cover the first three months of rent.â
âYou donât have to pay rent. Just pick a room.â
âAnd Iâll pay you back in company? Save you from having dinner alone at your candelabra- lit fifty- foot cherrywood table, like Bruce Wayne?â
âI usually have dinner standing up in front of that chessboard over there.â
âIâm surprised you have dinner at all. And donât just sustain yourself on the tears of your rivals.â
He smiles again, and God.
He is offensively, uniquely, devastatingly handsome.
I take a step back, reaching for my purse, throwing away the Snickers wrapper. âLeftover soupâs in the fridge. Take ibuprofen again in five hours. And have someone come over so if you pass out, theyâll notice before the rats eat your intestines.â
âYouâre here.â
âI here. Iâm leaving now.â
Nolan deflates visibly, and something like compassion bites into me.
âWhereâs Emil?â I ask.
âIâm not going to call Emil because I have the sniffles. Heâs busy with midterms and spending three hours a day pining after Tanu.â
âSomeone else, then.â
He shakes his head. âIâll be fine.â
âYou wonât. You were half dead when I got here.â
âThen stay.â
âIâm already late for Zugzwang. I . . .â
Heâs staring at me with those dark, clear eyes, and I just canât go. I canât leave him. What if he gets dehydrated and dies? Will that be on me, then? Iâm not giving his ghost the satisfaction of haunting several generations of Greenleaf women. Iâm keeping this jerk alive.
âSince both our jobs consist of playing chess, we should play a game,â he says while I text Defne that something urgent has come up. âJust to be productive members of this capitalistic society.â
âNice try.â
âDid it work?â
âNo. Nolan, you still look like death. Just go nap while I waste my day watching playthroughs on your Wi-Fi.â
âDragon ?â
And thatâs how I find myself on Nolanâs leather couch, telling him about elves and eggheads and the end of the world, soothed by the video and by Nolanâs presence.
âI like this better than the Jughead show,â he says ten minutes in. I yawn, quite pleased.
Then, another ten minutes later, Iâm only fast asleep.
THE EARLY AFTERNOON SUNLIGHT IS BRIGHT, BUT I DONâTÂ care. I get to ignore it because the most delicious blanket is wrapped around me. Flawless, A+, 12/10, five- star Amazon review. It keeps me toasty and presses me into the back of the couch, solid and heavy, the perfect mix of hard and soft. Mostly hard, but in a good way. It even slipped a leg right between mine, and its arms are looped around my rib cage. It makes it nearly impossible for me to move, but I donât mind, because I feel protected from attacks from all sides. Like the king during good chess.
Iâm not leaving this place, ever. I live here now, in heaven. I open my eyes to survey my new kingdom andâ
Nolan is right here. Looking at me. And something within me tells me I should panic, but all I can do is say:
âHey.â
âHey,â he says back, and I nearly feel the gravel of his voice against my lips. He smells of something ineffably rich and good.
âHey,â I say again, stupidly, and weâre both smiling, and the air between us is sweet, and his eyes, his nose, his lips are suddenly closer, andâ
Something buzzes and I splash back into reality. I wiggle inside of Nolanâs grip, shooting up to a sitting position.
âIgnore it,â he orders, but I ignore .
What just happened? Oh God. Iâve never slept with someone else.
. Not like this. Not . . . whatâs happening?
And the buzz, itâs still going on. âI thinkâ my phoneâ â Here it is. How do you pick up? Red? No, green. âHello.â
âMal? You okay?â Defne.
âYes. Sorry about not coming in, Iâ â
âHave you seen the paper?â
Oh, shit. The article. âI . . . Donât worry about it. Itâs a lie, Iâm not sleeping with Nolan.â Nolanâs eyebrow lifts. His arms are still looped around my waist, and I die inside. âI meant, weâre notâ â
âThis has nothing to do with Nolan.â
âOh.â Phew. âWhat then?â
âItâs the Challengers, Mal. They chose you as one of this yearâs participants.â