I enter the press conference a little like Meghan Markle would: flanked by two FIDE people whose names I didnât catch, followed by a burly man who, I suspect, has something to do with security. The camera flashes explode the second I step into the room, but in a subdued way thatâs more than .
I know, then and there, that Iâll never, ever, get used to this. And that I probably shouldnât have worn my green Chucks with the hole in the left pinkie.
A couple of journalists in the first row greet me. Iâve never met them before, and yet they smile at me like Iâm the distant cousin they see only at weddings and baptisms but nevertheless like. This is . . . weird. Much weirder than casual chess fans asking for autographs.
Never, ever, .
âHi, guys.â I wave awkwardly and glance around. Thereâs no one I know here: press passes were required, and Defne didnât get one. Iâm crowdedly alone in a fancy Italian room full of antique velvet curtains, and the worst is yet toâ
In the last row, someone is grinning and waving at me. Eleni from the BBC, half submerged by the small mountain of equipment sheâs carrying. Clearly, still an intern. I smile back at her and feel marginally better.
The table on the podium is long and narrow, with three sets of mics and plaques. The middle one is already taken by the moderator, a middle- aged man who happens to be one of FIDEâs many VPs and whom I vaguely remember from the Challengers. The one on the right bears my name, and thatâs where I sit.
The remaining one, at the moderatorâs left, is empty when I arrive.
And stays empty for one minute.
Two.
Two and a half.
Three, and I was already a bit late, because the ferry system is not exactly straightforward, and Easton and I needed a fourth breakfast. Weâre now almost ten minutes past schedule, which is why the journalists, and there are of them, whisper like this is a scandalously juicy Victorian ball.
I look at the moderator in panic.
âDonât worry,â he whispers conspiratorially, hiding our conversation with a sheet of white paper. âHe wonât dare no-show. Weâve learned our lessons with him.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âHe hates press events and always tries to skip them. Butââ he points behind us, to the panels decorated with sponsors and brandsâ âFIDE makes lots of money from them, especially this year. So we write steep fines into his contracts that make it impossible for him to avoid them.â He gives me a cunning, if warm, smile, and lowers the paper before clearing his throat and turning on his mic. âWell, everyone. It seems like there are some delays. Why donât Ms. Greenleaf and I entertain you all with a game of chess. Iâll take White.â
The murmurs get louder. I glance around, find no set, then realize what his plan is when he says into the mic, âd4.â
âOh.â I scratch my nose. âUm, d5?â
âc4.â His eyes shine and he turns toward the journalists. âWill she accept my gambit?â
I usually donât. I usually decline the Queenâs Gambit with e6 and then build up a solid position, but he looks so hopeful, and people do love an accepted challenge, so I grin and say, âc4, take pawn.â
People cheer. My grin widens. The tension in the room melts a little as the moderator laughs and nods, pleased. âe3,â he says, and Iâm considering moving my knight to f6 just for the fun of it whenâ
A door opens.
Not the door I came in from, but one on the side that I hadnât even noticed. The cameras start again. A red- haired woman whom I recognize from Philly Openâ Nolanâs manager, who must be better than Defne at obtaining press passesâ walks briskly into the room, looking less than happy, and right behind her . . .
I thought I had successfully fortified my defenses. Because I spent those three minutes with Easton in the bathroom, following her instructions on how to brace myself. I squared my shoulders, took a deep breath, and repeated at her insistence:
Still, I did think Iâd be fine. But when Nolan enters wearing his usual combo of dark shirt and dark jeans, eyes guarded, hair shorter than the last time I ran my fingers through it, Iâm fine.
Iâm not okay at all.
He doesnât glance in my direction, not once. He calmly steps onto the podium, and when a woman from the fourth row says, âYouâre late, Nolan. Everything okay?â he just answers, âYeah.â He speaks into the microphone, effortlessly confident. Heâs done this before. He might hate it, but he has a decade of experience on me. âMy car broke down,â he adds, and everyone laughs.
I fist my hands in my lap until Iâm sure theyâre not shaking. By the time the moderator goes through a few introductory words and picks the first question, Iâve recovered. At least a little bit.
âKarl Becker, DPA. Nolan, you havenât made a statement about Malte Kochâs cheating scandal. Is the three- year suspension he received fair? And what do you think about him?â
âI try not to think about him at all.â People chuckle. âAnd itâs up to FIDE to decide whatâs fair.â
âLucia Montresor, . Nolan, how is your playing shape compared with the Pasternak?â
He half huffs, half winces. âCanât possibly be worse, can it?â
More laughter. Nolan hasnât changed much since that talk show interview several years ago, the one that makes me think of Mrs. Agarwal and baking soda. Heâs still charismatic, almost despite himself. He still doesnât want to be here, doesnât mind admitting to it, and yet manages to navigate the questions in a relaxed, charming, uncomplicated way.
I look at him looking at me, and my heart squeezes.
âAnd a question for Mallory: This was your breakout year. How does it feel, being here?â
âItâs . . .â Everyone turns to me. Except for Nolan, who keeps looking straight ahead into the crowd.
He hates me. For what I said. For leaving. I screwed up, and he hates me, and heâs right.
âItâs an honor.â I attempt a smile. âI am happy and grateful.â
âAFP, Etienne Leroyâ question for both. You two have close family members who used to play chess at high levels but are not here anymore. Does that make your championship more meaningful?â
I stiffen. I canât talk about Dad. Or: the last month has shown me that I can talk about Dad, but I donât to talk about Dad in front of dozens of people whoâ
âNope,â Nolan says flatly, saving us both. The moderator picks another journalist, and Iâm flooded with relief.
âReutersâ Chasten. Nolan, there is a rumor that Ms. Greenleaf was part of your team of assistants before the cheating scandal came to light and she became the challenger. Care to confirm or deny?â
âNot particularly, no.â
Laughter.
âEither way, some say that having been your second will give Ms. Greenleaf an unfair advantage.â
Nolan shrugs. âIf think that she needs an unfair advantage, then they need to pay better attention when she plays.â
The room drops into murmured quiet. My heart beats into my ears.
âMallory, Fox News. You are the to make it to the World Championship. What do you attribute it to?â
âI just . . .â I bit into my lip. âOnly to the fact that I had a nontraditional path to chess. And didnât have to suffer through the sexism of this environment as much as most female players do. Didnât have a chance to get discouraged.â
âSo you donât think youâre better than all the women who came before you?â
âNo, not at all. Iâ â
âThen, since you have never even been part of a supertournament, what makes you qualified to be today? Why and not someone else?â
I swallow. âI just . . .â
âManââNolan snorts into the micâ âshe won the qualifying tournament to be here. Keep up, will you?â
Fox News lowers his eyes, chastised. I glance at Nolan, who really works the crowd like a stand-up comedian. People laugh, and a couple even clap, because they find him amusing and like him even when heâs not likable. I want to scream at them, âMallory? AFP again. Does your past romantic relationship with Nolan make this championship more complicated for you? Will it in any way affect your play?â
Well.
Probably stupid of me, but I really didnât think they would go there. And Iâm positive the moderator didnât, either, because I feel him tense next to me.
I almost turn to Nolan. Because, letâs be honest: every other hard, difficult question that might have made me stumble, he took, blocked, deflected. This one, though . . . he simply canât. And even though I could probably deny that our relationship was ever romantic, or straight-up refuse to answer, or even tell the truth, Iâm not prepared for any of this. So I take the easy way out, and hear myself say:
âNo.â
It echoes in the murmuring room like a slap, and I immediately want to take it back. I want to look at Nolan and say . . .
I donât know what. But itâs okay, because I donât get the chance. âVery well,â the moderator interrupts. âWe seem to be pressed for time. I think weâll call it for today, butâ â
âOne last questionâ Trent Moles, the . In the name of good sportsmanship, could you both say what you admire the most about your opponentâs play?â
The moderator hesitates, like he knows this question is a bad idea. But then he looks to his left. âOf course. Would you like to take it?â
Nolan wouldnât. At least, thatâs what I assume when he stays sprawled back in his seat, like weâre back in New York and heâs watching Emil fail at making sourdough, like the entire world and dozens of Instagram accounts dedicated to his hands and dimples and gambits arenât watching like hawks.
But then he shifts. I watch him lean forward, just an inch, then another, and inhale minutely before speaking into the mic. âEvery last thing,â he says. Simple. Decisive.
Heart shattering.
Itâs followed by a moment of silence. For the first time, no one laughs. No one speaks. No one scribbles notes on their pad. No one raises their hand for another question.
My heart presses desperately against the borders of my chest.
The moderator clears his throat and turns to me.
âMallory,â he asks. âWhat do you admire the most about Nolanâs play?â
âI . . .â
He is so dynamic.
He fights to the last point, using every piece, every moment, every resource, bleeding the chessboard dry.
He is deadly and meticulous.
He is fun and interesting and unpredictable.
He is an .
And that frown on his forehead, when heâs thinking about how to make the next move as nuclear and chaotic as possible. It makes me want to reach out and pull his visor- hands away. It makes me want to smooth it. It makes me want to play my own best chess andâ
âMallory?â
I look up from my Fiji water bottle. There are a million eyes on me. I swallow.
âRight. I . . .â
I am lost for words. I am overwhelmed, swept away, disoriented. And the moderator nods, then smiles kindly.
âWell, I guess answer is nothing.â A few forced chuckles. Then more journalists raise their hands, clamoring for one last question that isnât to be. âThank you for coming, everyone. Of course, weâll have longer press conferences after each game, so Iâm excited to . . .â
A FIDE employee asks me to stand. She takes my elbow to guide me off the podium. I follow her past Nolanâs chair, and when my hand brushes against his shoulder blade, Iâm not sure whether itâs an accident or desperation.
I step out of the room knowing that he hasnât looked at me a single time.
I STAY AT THE GALA FOR LESS THAN TEN MINUTES. IâMÂ chewing on my fifth bruschetta and craning my neck, on the lookout for broad shoulders and cropped dark curls, when Defne whisks me away with a hand on my wrist. âOkay, you made your appearance. Now we leave.â Her bright red lips stick to a polite smile as she crisscrosses me through the crowd.
âBut I only just got there. And the bruschetta is .â
âAnd you gotta be in bed by nine, since tomorrowâs the most important game of your career.â
âIs it? Because as far as I know, I have twelve coming up.â
âThe first one sets the tone, Mal.â
âI . . . Wonât it be rude to leave?â
âMaybe.â She pulls me up the stairs. âBut your opponent didnât even bother showing up. As long as his rudeness eclipses yours, youâre golden.â
Thatâs how I end up wearing my jammies at 8:53, tucked in, pillow punched underneath my head. Easton slides in on her side of the bed, Darcy curls right between us, and Sabrina settles at the foot of the mattress.
A veritable slumber party.
âAccording to my trainer, I should be asleep in five minutes,â I point out.
âAh, yes.â Sabrina doesnât look up from her phone. âIs Defne going to come burp you, too?â
âCome on, Sabrina,â Easton scolds her. âYou know she first needs a diaper change.â
We argue for the longest time over what to watch on the 8K TV. Then we give up on finding a movie that wonât be vetoed by at least one other person, and settle for pulling up random You-Tube videos. After nine centuries of surprisingly violent roller derby footage that have me worried for the state of Sabrinaâs brain, Easton blesses me with a playthrough. For a minute it feels like it used to beâ the two of us, and Solas being an asshole on screen. When I turn to grin at her, I find that sheâs already grinning at me. Then I remember something, and my smile slips.
âWhat?â she asks.
âNothing. Just . . .â I shrug. âI watched one with Nolan once.â
âA playthrough? Is that gem of a boy into ?â
âNot really.â
âAh. Iâve seen your press conference, by the way. Nice job making it look like you totally despise him even when he said nothing but super- nice things about you.â
âI .â
âYes, you did,â Darcy and Sabrina say in chorus, without tearing their eyes from the TV.
âWhatever.â I roll my eyes. Because theyâre right. âHe hasnât really . . . Maybe he said nice things, but donât be fooled. He hasnât acknowledged my presence.â
âMmm.â Easton nods. âHave you considered acknowledging his first? Maybe be like, âHey, whadup, I didnât really mean the many horrible things I said about you.â â
âRight.â I clear my throat. Look away. âNo.â
âDid you call a bitch, too?â Darcy asks.
I tilt my chin up and groan. âI refuse to engage on this topic with anyone whoâs eighteen, or with anyone whoâs eighteen but needs a twenty- five- minute pep talk to add a heart emoji to a text,â I declare. But ten minutes later, while a Texan lady nurses an injured bat back to health (Darcyâs selection), I start composing a text. The most recent blue bubbles are dated January 9, middle of the night: the response to my Either Emilâs really good at sex or heâs gutting Tanu, was You mean, itâs not a foghorn that woke me up? I half smile and write:
Then I delete it. And type again:
Delete.
Delete, delete, delete.
Delete.
I donât hit Send. But I leave it there, in the typing box. And when I set my phone against my chest and go back to watching TV, it feels several pounds heavier than ever before.