We wake up early in the morning. Do a bunch of slow, sleepy stuff with our hands that feels really good and also happens not to require a condom. I had only one, left in my backpack from who knows when; Nolan had none. Apparently we really had fooled ourselves into thinking that this wouldnât happen. I fall asleep on his chest, his arms looped around me, feeling his rapid breathing slow down to something calmer, then slide into sleep and pull me under.
The buzz of Nolanâs phone on the nightstand wakes us up once the sun is high. He answers with a huge yawn. âYeah?â His voice is too loud. Or maybe not. Maybe itâs the way weâre pretzeled together skin to skin, legs coiled, his free hand tangled in my hair and holding me into the curve of his shoulder. âThatâs because I sleeping. Yup. Yeah. Sure.â He sounds unimpressed. He sounds like the delicious, warm version of Nolan that kept ordering me to stop fidgeting at 3:00 a.m. This is not real life. âUh-uh.â I pull back to watch his slitted, tired eyes and his swollen lips. He smells fantastic. I want to sink under his skin. I want to move between his legs and dwell on the expanse of his chest. Iâ
âSure. Sheâs here. Let me ask her.â
Nolan presses his phone against his shoulders. My eyes widen. âWhat?â I whisper. âDonât tell them Iâm here! Theyâll think that I . . .â
He gives me a confused look. âThat youâre here?â
I groan and hide back in his neck.
âThere is a charity event. Someone wants us to play together, against . . .â He picks up his phone again. âWho would we be playing against?â I hear a brisk female voice on the other side. âSome tech industry person,â he tells me, and then into the speaker again, âIs it Bill Gates again? Elle, heâs at chess. I canât make the game last longer than one minute against . . . Yeah. Iâll call you back.â He tosses the phone to the side and pulls me closer, covering our heads with the blankets.
The outside world disappears.
âWhoâs Elle?â I ask.
âMy manager.â He pushes my hair behind my ear. âWhat should I tell her?â
âWhen is this happening?â
âNot until the spring.â
âWhy the tech industry?â
âItâs full of people who have a hard-on for chess, apparently.â
It makes a surprising amount of sense. âWhy do you have a manager?â
âAll pro players do. Youâll need one, too.â
âWould you recommend Elle?â
âHell no. Save yourself.â
I laugh. âCan I . . . think about it? The charity thing.â
âSure.â
We fall quiet, cocooned by the soft cotton of sheets, impossibly close.
I wonder, feeling stuck in a dream.
Then he murmurs, âGood morning,â while pressing a kiss on my forehead, and it all starts to seem warm, and precariously good, and true.
NOLAN HAS NO POKER FACE. NO ABILITY TO LIE, OR TRICK, ORÂ hide. No intention to, either.
He tracks my movements with a small smile whenever I step away from the chessboard to grab a glass of water. He kisses me against the fridge while the three GMs are talking about the French Defense five feet from us. He takes my hand and pulls me out for a walk in the snow as the sun is about to set, like healthy habits are something he suddenly cares about.
I wish I could say I minded, but I love every second of it.
Thereâs a curious, painfully honest confidence about him. Last night was good, good, but it was also his first time, first time: messy and imperfect, full of hushed questions and trials and errors. His hands on me were bold, but inexperienced and tentative. Other guys would be drowning in their fragile masculinity today, but Nolan just seems deeply, genuinely happy.
Then again, remembering the sounds I made, the gasps . . . I guess he got glowing feedback.
âCanât believe he used an Evans Gambit three years ago,â he says about the Koch game we just analyzed. His footprints in the snow are almost twice as large as mine.
âYeah, well. It was a bad choice, since Thagard- Vork destroyed him.â
âStill. I havenât seen the Evans since the week I learned how to play.â
I smile. âWhen was that, by the way?â
âWhat?â He gives me a curious look.
âWhen you learn to play chess?â
âI donât remember. Pretty sure itâs on Wikipedia.â
âYeah. But unlike my sister, I refuse to read it. Boundaries and stuff.â I stop him with a tug on his coat. Iâm wearing his gloves, because itâs freezing and I forgot to bring mine. They dwarf my hands, and Nolan smiles at the sight. âBut I still want to know.â
âI was . . . five? But I didnât understand. Not until I was well over six.â
âYour grandfather taught you?â
âKind of. He was training a lot of people at the time, and I just . . . I wanted to be in the midst of things. He was the coolest person I knew, and I wanted him to pay attention to me.â
âAnd your parents didnât want you to?â
He shrugs. âMy dadâs an asshole. And even if he werenât, he just doesnât have the chess bone. When I was little, I would spend hours thinking about puzzles or Legos or toys, reasoning over them, analyzing, and he couldnât understand why. He thought there was something wrong with me. Put me in all sorts of sports. And I was good enough at them, because I was tall and quick, but they were never . . .â
âThey werenât chess?â
He nods.
I think about Dad. About how he was the opposite, constantly pushing me toward chess. About how if he were still alive, weâd probably be just as estranged as Nolan and his father are. Vastly different paths, same results. âDo you hate your parents?â
He lets out a small laugh. âI donât think so. I donât think about them much. Havenât for a while.â He swallows. âSomehow, it hurts even worse.â
I reach out, sinking my hand in the pocket of his coat. He exhales, a white chuff in the late afternoon air. âIt didnât matter when my grandfather was around, because he got me. Heâd been like me as a kid, or similar enough. When my parents divorced, they stopped feeling like they had to care about me. Mom remarried. Then Dad. Then his new wife got pregnant and it was almost a relief. I was an afterthought, and I could just stay with my grandfather for weeks at a time. It was just me and him. Playing, playing again. Playing some more.â
âDid you ever win?â
âOh, no. Not for a long time. Not until I was nine or ten. Then I did, and I was almost afraid. He hated losing as much as I do. I thought heâd be mad. But . . .â He shakes his head. âI think it was the happiest Iâd ever seen him.â
âSo maybe he hate losing as much as you do.â
âI think . . .â He stops, and so do I. Holds my eyes. âHe told me once that sometimes, with some people, itâs not about winning or losing. That with some people, itâs just about playing. Though for the longest time, I didnât really believe him.â
âYeah?â I look away, toward the setting sun. âI still think about losing to Koch. Every day. Every hour.â
âI know.â
âStop reading my mind.â I poke him in the stomach. He snatches my hand and pulls me closer to him. âHow do deal with losses?â
âI donât.â
âSo you just feel like shit? Every time?â
âYou basically have to hate losing to be a top player. Pretty sure the genes are on the same chromosome.â
âIs that why youâre a terrible loser?â
âYup. And why are one.â
I smile. âNot gonna lie, itâs validating. Growing up, I couldnât figure out why Easton was so chill about losing all those matches. Meanwhile even draws sent me into a deep funk.â
âEaston?â
âOh. Sheâs my best friend.â I swallow. âWell. Former?â
His head cocks. âDid she take your queen?â
âNo. She . . . left. For college. Colorado.â
âAh.â
âYeah. Havenât heard from her much ever since.â I sigh. âHow do you keep in touch with Tanu and Emil, again?â
âItâs not the same. Emilâs still in New York and hates the dorms, which means that heâs always at my place. And you know how Tanu is. Iâd have to work hard on ditching her.â
âYeah.â I try not to sound too jealous. âEaston finds me boring and uninteresting now that I donât . . . I donât even know. Play beer pong with her?â
âShe told you that?â
âNo. But I know it.â
âCould you be assuming?â
âNo.â
He nods, and I like that heâs not trying to lie to me. To convince me that Iâm imagining it all. âHave you considered confronting her?â
âNo. I . . . I donât want her pity. I want her to be with me because she wants to.â
âAh, yes.â He nods knowingly. His chin dips into the raised neck of his coat. âYou do like being in charge.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âYou like having the upper hand. Feeling like youâre doing something for others. Like youâre in control.â
âNo.â I frown. âThatâs not it at all.â
âI think itâs easier for you to be with people when you feel needed than when you need them. Less risky. Less messy, right?â
âBut itâs not true. I mean, according to Sabrina my family doesnât need me for anything but money anymore. And Eastonâs the one who went MIA. And youâ
most certainly donât need meâ â
âBut I do.â
I snort. âCome on. You have a million seconds, and legions of adoring fans, Tanu and Emil, Elle the scary manager, the press, the entire â â
âMallory.â He stops me. His expression is solemn. âItâs lonely, chess. You may have a team around you, but when it really comes down to it, youâre on your own. You play on your own. You lose and win on your own. You go home, and youâre on your own.â He takes in the disappearing light, his eyes darker than ever. And then looks back to me, presses a pale strand of hair behind my ear, and asks something I didnât expect. âWill you come to Italy with me?â
âTo Italy?â
He nods. âFor the World Championship.â
âI . . . Why?â
His throat works. âI had my grandfather with me for the first one, six years ago. But after that, I was always on my own.â
âBut Tanu and Emil are going to be there, andâ â
âThey are. But . . .â I can see the gears in his head, like heâs trying to articulate a fuzzy, ungraspable feeling. âTheyâll be there each other first.â
Somehow, I know exactly what he means.
, I want to say.
My heart beats faster, because this feels like a threshold. A touch- take decision that I wonât ever be able to undo. If I say yes, then Nolan and I will be something different. Something . More than the sum of our parts.
Then, no. No should be the only possible answer. I have no business promising to be there for anyone. I have priorities. Duties. But.
âDo you want me to be there?â I ask.
He nods instantly.
I take his cold palm, lift it in both my hands, and press a soft kiss in the middle, where the fate line slashes between the head and the heart.
âIâll be there, then.â I smile up at him, right as the last of the sunlight fades into the snow. âFor you.â
IT OCCURS TO ME THAT NIGHT, AFTER WE CHECK SOME OFÂ Kochâs recent Challengers games against engines and instead of staying up late to pore over the results we decide to go to bed at eight, that maybe the timing for this thing is a little off.
We should be training hard. We should focus on strategy, tactics, preparation.
We should be staring at each other across the table.
We should drift off during Tanuâs passionate speech on why Velveeta is legally not cheese to exchange faint, unprompted, unjustified smiles.
We should not needlessly brush knuckles as he hands me his plate for the dishwasher.
And most definitely, we should not fall on each other the second weâre in his room, the wood of his door smooth under my back, his front pressed against mine as we kiss deeply. The mechanics of this are familiar, but the impatience simmering inside me is new. The feeling that one more minute apart will be too much. Seeing the same eagerness mirrored in Nolan.
âWe still donât have a condom,â I tell him, and he grunts against my throat. Then steps an inch back.
âIâm going to get one from Emilâ â
âNo.
.â
âWhy?â
âIâd rather they not know.â
âMallory.â He presses a kiss on my cheekbone. My nose. âThey know.â
âYeah, but they donât know, and . . .â Iâm the one to groan now. âLetâs just go to CVS tomorrow.â
âTomorrow?â He pulls back and looks so horrifically, theatrically appalled, I have to laugh and kiss the expression off his face.
âWe can do things in the meantime.â
His fingers slide down my spine, slowly massaging each knob. âLike what? Shovel snow? Color by the number?â
I laugh against his mouth. âSo many options.â
âPlease, list them for me. I am new at this.â His hand slips inside the waist of my jeans, and I exhale sharply.
âIllegal move.â
âShould we call in the arbiter?â
âOnly ifâ â My phone rings, and he groans. I whimper, working my hand between us to retrieve it from my pocket.
âItâs Defne,â I say. I have a déjà vuâ months ago, on Nolanâs couch. She has , cockblocking timing.
âIgnore her,â he orders, and Iâm happy to. I toss it on Nolanâs dresser, and weâre back on each other, graceless, uncoordinated, voracious, until he kneels in front of me and starts unbuttoning my pants. âSo.â He speaks against my hip bone. âThese we are going to do. Could they involve meâ â
My phone, again. No, Nolanâsâ itâs phone buzzing now. âFuck,â he grunts, pulling it out of his pocket and throwing it next to mine.
But my eyes fall on the caller ID, and I stiffen. âWait. Itâs Defne.â
She hasnât called once since we came here, just the occasional text. And now . . .
We halt.
Nolanâs phone stops buzzing. A second later mine starts ringing again.
We exchange a long look, both out of breath. He lets out a deep, frustrated groan, and hides his face in my stomach. His hands close around my waist, trembling slightly. I take it as tacit permission to pick up.
âHey, Dâ â He inches my shirt up and nibbles on my belly button. My breath hitches. I giggle, sigh, try to push him away. Then the cycle starts all over. âHey, Defne,â I finally manage. Nolan licks a stripe below my navel. âHow are youâ â
âMallory, Iâm on my way to pick you up. You need to return to New York immediately.â