Heâs not looking at me.
Heâs holding out his hand, but his eyes are on the board, and for a split second I canât figure out what is happening, where I am, or what I came here to do. I canât figure out what my name is.
No. Wait. I do know .
âMallory Greenleaf,â I stammer, taking his hand. It completely engulfs mine. His shake is brief, warm, and very, very firm. âPCC. That is, Paterson. Club. Uh, chess club.â I clear my throat. Wow. So eloquent. Much articulate. âNice to meet you,â I lie.
He lies right back at me with a âLikewise,â and still doesnât look up. Just sets his elbows on the table, keeping his gaze fixed on the pieces, as though my person, my face, my identity, are utterly irrelevant. As though I am but an extension of the white side of the board.
It cannot be. This guy cannot be Nolan Sawyer. Or, not Nolan Sawyer. The famous one. The sex symbolâ whatever that even means. The guy who a couple of years ago was number one in the world and now . . .
I have no clue what Nolan Sawyerâs up to now, but he be sitting across from me. The people on our left and right seem to be not-so-subtly eyeing him, and I want to yell at them that this is just a doppelgänger. Plenty of those going around. Doppelgängerpalooza, these days.
It would explain why heâs sitting there, doing nothing. Clearly, bizarro Nolan Sawyer doesnât know how to play and thought this would be a mah- jongg tournament and is wondering where the tiles are andâ
Someone clears their throat. Itâs the player sitting next to me: a middle-aged man whoâs neglecting his own match to gawk at mine, pointedly staring between me and my pieces.
Which are white.
â I have the first move. What do I do? Where do I start? Which piece do I use?
Pawn to e4. There. Done. The most common, boringâ
âMy clock,â Sawyer murmurs distractedly. His eyes are on my pawn.
âWhat?â
âI need you to start my clock, or I wonât be able to respond.â He sounds bored, with a dash of annoyed.
I flush scarlet, utterly mortified, and look around. I canât find the stupid clock until someoneâ Sawyerâ pushes it an inch toward me. It was right by my left hand.
Perfect. Lovely. Now would be an excellent time for the floor to morph into quicksand. Swallow me alive, too.
âIâm sorry. Umâ I about the clock. But I forgot, andâ â
âItâs fine.â He makes his moveâ pawn in e5. Starts my clock.
Then itâs my turn again, andâ shit, Iâm gonna have to move more than once. Against Nolan Sawyer. This is unjust. A travesty.
Pawn in d4, maybe? And then, after he takes my pawn, I move another to c3. Wait, what am I doing? Am I . . . Iâm not trying a Danish Gambit with Nolan Sawyer, am I?
Dadâs voice rings in my ears.
I briefly consider my glaring lack of follow-up plans. Well, then. I could use a puke bucket, but instead I just sigh and resignedly push my bishop into the midst, because the more the merrier.
This is a disaster. Send help.
I make five moves after that. Then two moreâ at which point Sawyer starts pressing me, dogging me insistently with his queen and knight, and I feel like one of the bugs that sometimes wander into Goliathâs cage. Pinned. Squashed. Done for. My stomach tightens, gelid, slimy, and I spend futile minutes staring at the board, scouring for a way out of this mess thatâs just .
Until it is.
It takes three moves and I lose my poor, battered bishop, but I disentangle myself from the pin. The dread of the opening is slowly melting into an old, familiar feeling:
. After each move I punch Sawyerâs clock and glance up at him, curious, though he never does the same.
Heâs always unreadable. Opaque. I have no doubt that heâs taking the game seriously, but heâs distant, as though playing from far away, locked in a cell on the top level of one of his rooks. Here, but not really . His movements, when he touches the pieces, are precise, economical, strong. I hate myself for noticing that. Heâs taller than the men sitting at his sides, and I hate myself for noticing that, too. His shoulders and biceps fill his black shirt just right, and when he rolls back his sleeves, I notice his forearms and am suddenly grateful that weâre playing chess and not arm- wrestling; I hate myself for that the most.
The Mallory-hate party is clearly in full swingâand then Sawyer moves his knight. After that, Iâm too busy trying to remember how to breathe to berate myself.
Itâs not that itâs the wrong move. Not at all. It is, in fact, a flawless move. I can see what heâs planning to do with itâ move it again, open me up, force me to castle. Check in four, or five. Knife to my throat, and Iâd be toast. But.
But, I think itâs possible that elsewhere on the board . . .
If I forced him into . . .
And he didnât retreat his . . .
My heart flutters. And I donât defend. Instead I advance my own knight, a little light- headed, and for the first time inâ oh my God, have we been at this for fifty- five minutes? How is that possible?
Why does chess always ?
For the very first time since we started, when I look up at Sawyer, I notice a trace of something. In the shifting line of his shoulders, the way he presses his fingers against his full lips, thereâs a hint that maybe he really here, after all. Playing this game. With me.
Well.
me.
A blink and it goes away. He moves his queen. Takes my bishop. Stops the clock.
I move my knight. Capture his pawn. Stop the clock.
Queen. Clock.
Knight, again. My mouth is dry. Clock.
Rook. Clock.
Pawn. I swallow, twice. Clock.
Rook takes pawn. Clock.
It takes Sawyer a couple of seconds to realize what has happened. A few beats to map all the possible scenarios in his head, all the possible roads this game could take. I know it, because I see him lift his hand to move his own queen, as though it could possibly make a difference, as though he could wiggle his way out of my attack. And I know it, because I have to clear my throat before I say, âI . . . Checkmate.â
Thatâs when he lifts his eyes to mine for the first time. They are dark, and clear, and serious. And they remind me of a few important, long- forgotten things.
When Nolan Sawyer was twelve, he placed third at a tournament because of an arguably unfair arbitral decision on castling short, and in response he wiped the chess pieces off the board with his arm. When he was thirteen, he placed second at the very same tournamentâ this time, he flipped an entire table. When he was fourteen, he got into a screaming match with Antonov over either a girl or a denied draw (rumors disagree), and I canât recall how old he was when he called a former world champion a fuckwhit for trying to pull an illegal move during a warm-up game.
I do recall, however, hearing the story and having no idea what a fuckwhit might be.
Each time, Sawyer was fined. Reprimanded. The object of scathing op-eds on chess media. And each time, he was welcomed back to the chess community with open arms, because hereâs the deal: for over a decade Nolan Sawyer has been rewriting chess history, redefining standards, bringing attention to the sport. Whereâs the fun in playing, if the best is left out? And if the best sometimes acts like a douchebag . . . well. Itâs all forgiven.
But not forgotten. Everyone in the community knows that Nolan Sawyer is a terrible, moody, ill- tempered ball of toxic masculinity. That heâs the poorest loser in the history of chess. In the history of any sport. In the history of .
Which, because he just lost against me, is possibly going to develop into a problem.
For the first time since the match started, I realize that a dozen people are standing around us, whispering to each other. I want to ask them what theyâre looking at, if I have a nosebleed, a wardrobe malfunction, a tarantula on my ear, but Iâm too busy staring at Sawyer. Tracking his movements. Making sure he wonât hurl the chess clock at me. Iâm not one to be easily intimidated, but Iâd rather avoid a checkmate- induced traumatic brain injury if he decides to smash a foldable chair on my head.
Though, surprisingly, he seems content to just study me. Lips slightly parted and eyes bright, like Iâm simultaneously something odd and familiar and puzzling and larger than life andâ
He looks. After ignoring me for twenty- five moves, he just . Calm. Inquisitive. Upsettingly angry. Something funny occurs to me: top players are always given cutesy nicknames by the press. The Artist. The Picasso of Chess. The Gambit Mozart. Nolanâs nickname?
The Kingkiller leans forward, ever so slightly, and his intense, awestruck expression feels much more threatening than a folding chair to my head.
âWhoâ â he starts, and I cannot bear it.
âThank you for the game,â I blurt out, and then, even though I should shake his hand, sign the scorecard, play three more gamesâ despite all of that, I leap to my feet.
, Dad used to say.
My chair falls to the ground as I run away. I hear the grating sound, and still donât stop to pick it up.