Oz doesnât talk to me for two weeksâ then he does, and I want to kill him.
Itâs a Thursday morning. Iâm at my desk, staring at the Zen garden, replaying a Fischerâ Spassky 1972 game in my head, when he says, âSo youâre coming to the Philly Open.â
I startle. Then hiss: âWhat?â
Iâm supremely, virulently, irrationally annoyed that heâs interrupting me this close to a breakthrough. Earlier today, while making Darcyâs oatmeal (
Sabrina muttered while biting into a Granny Smith) I realized that Fischer made a mistake, one that Spassky could have exploited. Iâve been thinking about it ever since, sure that if Black used the knight toâ
âIâll drive,â Oz says. âWe leave at six.â
is he talking? I am irritated. âDrive where?â
âTo Philly. Whatâs wrong with you?â
I ignore him, go back to focusing on my replay until my afternoon session with Defne. Iâve started looking forward to my meetings with herâ partly because sheâs the only human adult I interact with aside from Mom, but also because I genuinely need her to parse chess stuff with me. The more effort I put into learning technical stuff, the harder it hits me how little I know, and how much I need a sounding board. I guess thatâs why GMs have coaches and trainers and whatnot.
âCan we go over a play?â I start the second I step into the library, sliding my notebook in her direction. âIâve been stuck onâ â
âLetâs first talk about Philly Open.â
I stop. âPhilly what?â
âPhilly Open. The tournament. Your first tournamentâ this weekend.â
I blink. âI . . .â
She cocks her head. âYou?â
Oh.
âI doubt . . . Thereâs no way . . .â I swallow. âDo you think Iâm ready?â
She smiles cheerfully. âHonestly, not at all.â
â
, itâs too good an opportunity. Phillyâs close by, and this is a very reputable open tournament.â I only have a vague idea of what that means, which must be why Defne continues. âIt attracts elite players, the top ten in the world, but also allows unrated players like you in the rated section. And itâs a knockout tournamentâ the loser of each match is eliminated, the winner moves forward. So you wonât be stuck with mediocre players just because youâre currently unrated. Provided that you keep winning.â She shrugs. The single feathered earring sheâs wearing tinkles happily. âIâll come with. Worse comes to worst, you just make a fool of yourself.â
And thatâs how I find myself in the passenger seat of Ozâs red Mini Hatch on a Saturday morning. In the back seat, Defne lists tournament rules as they come to mind, her voice too loud for 7:00 a.m. âTouch- move and touch- take, of courseâ if you touch a piece during your turn, youâll have to move it. You must record all your moves on the score sheet, in algebraic notations. No talking to your opponent unless itâs your turn and youâre offering a draw. When castling, use only one hand and touch the king first. If thereâs a conflict or a disagreement, call one of the tournament directors to solve it for you, donât fight withâ â
âWhat do you think youâre doing?â Oz barks. I follow his eyes to the foil- wrapped PB&J I just took out of my bag.
âUmâ want a piece?â
âEat thatâ or anything elseâ in my car, and I will chop your hands off and boil them in my urine.â
âIâm hungry.â
âThen starve.â
I bite the inside of my cheek. Honestly, I think Iâm growing on him. âBut this is my emotional support sandwich.â
âThen have a mental breakdown.â He turn- signals and swerves to the right so hard, I almost hit my head against the window.
Philly Open is nothing like the NYC charity tournament, and my first clue is that thereâs press. Not a ridiculous amount, like the paparazzi on Taylor Swift ca. 2016. But a sizable gaggle of journalists with camerapeople and photographers in tow crowds the hall of the Penn State engineering building, where the tournament will take place. Itâs vaguely surreal.
âWas there a homicide or something?â I ask.
Oz gives me his usual glance. âTheyâre covering the tournament.â
âAre they under the misconception that this is the NBA?â
âMallory, at least to have some respect for the sport that is your livelihood.â
Heâs not wrong. âThe tournament wonât start for another hour, though.â
âTheyâre probably just hoping to get a glimpse ofâ â
Someone enters the lobby and Oz turns that wayâ together with everyone else. Thereâs some commotion as the journalists spring into action. I canât see much: a tall head of dark hair, then tall head of dark hair, both peeking through the cameras and the boom mics and heading straight for the elevator. I canât quite make out what the press is asking, only vague words that make little sense togetherâ
, . By the time Iâve pushed to my toes, the elevator doors have swished closed. Journalists murmur their disappointment, then slowly scatter about.
Part of me wonders who that was. Another part, the one thatâs been having odd, invasive dreams of dark eyes and large hands wrapped around my queen, is almost certain thatâ
âYour registrationâs all set, guys.â Defne appears to hand us lanyards with name tags. âLetâs go to the hotel, leave our stuff, then come back for the opening ceremony.â
I nod, hoping to sneak in a micronap, when an older man with a mic takes a few steps toward us. âGM Oz Nothomb?â he asks. âIâm Joe Alinsky, from . Do you have time for a short interview?â
âOz is currently number twenty,â Defne whispers in my ear while Oz affably answers questions about his shape, training, hopes, favorite pregame snacks (surprisingly: gummy bears).
âTwenty?â
âTwenty in the world.â
âTwenty in the world of . . . ?â
âChess.â
âAh, right.â
Defne smiles encouragingly. Considering that I lived and breathed chess for nearly a decade, and how much I still remember about the game itself, I know surprisingly little about the nitty- gritty of professional chess, probably because of Momâs moratorium on rated play. But Defne never makes me feel like Iâm a total idiot, even when I ask totally idiotic questions. âThe top twenty in the world is important. Theyâre the ones who manage to make the shift from competitive chess to pros.â
âAre those not the same?â
âOh, no. Anyone can be a competitive player, but pros make a living from chess. They support themselves through cash prizes, sponsorships, endorsements from companies.â
I picture a Mountain Dew Super Bowl ad featuring a chess player.
âIs Oz also a fellow?â
âThe opposite. He some of the GMs at Zugzwang to train him.â
âOh.â I mull it. âDoes he have a side job?â Maybe he does Instacart deliveries from 2:00 to 5:00 a.m.? It would explain the perennial bad mood.
âNope, but he does have a dad whoâs an exec at Goldman Sachs.â
âAh.â I notice that the ChessWorld.com journalist is taking a picture of Oz and quickly step out of frame.
Itâs stupid. Sabrina and Darcy are with friends till tomorrow; Mom has been better and is working on a few technical writing pieces, which should bring in some needed cash; I told them that Iâd spend the day in Coney Island with friends, then stay at Giannaâs place for the night. So I lying to them about what Iâm doing, but thereâs no way theyâll find out where I really went from the background of Ozâs picture on ChessWorld.com.
Iâm being paranoid. Because Iâm tired and hungry. Because Oz didnât let me eat my PB&J. Monster.
âHey,â Joe Alinsky says, suddenly ignoring Oz, eyes narrow on me, âarenât you the girl whoâ â
âSorry, Joe, we gotta go freshen up before the tournament.â Defne grabs my sleeve and pulls me outside of the building. The morning air is already too hot.
âWas he talking to me?â
âI feel like Starbucks,â she says, walking away. âDo you want Starbucks? Itâs on me.â
I want to ask Defne whatâs going on. But I want an iced kiwi starfruit lemonade harder, so I jog after her and drop the subject altogether.
WHEN I SIT DOWN FOR MY FIRST MATCH, IN FRONT OF A MANÂ who could be my grandfather, my heart pounds, my palms sweat, and I cannot stop nibbling at the inside of my lip.
Iâm not sure when it happened. I was fine till ten minutes ago, looking around the crowded room, staring down at my lilac sundress, wondering if itâs proper chess attire or whether I care. Then the tournament directors announced the start, and here I am. Afraid of disappointing Defne. Afraid of the sour flavor in my throat whenever I lose.
I donât remember the last time I was this nervous, but itâs okay, because I still win in twelve moves. The man sighs, shakes my hand, and Iâm left with forty- five minutes to kill. I walk around, studying interesting positions. Then I snap a picture of the room and text it to Easton.
i blame you for this Where are you?
some tournament in philly.
Dude, are you at Philly Open???
maybe. howâs higher ed treating you?
Iâve been sleeping three hours per night and joined an improv group. Put me out of my misery.
LMAO tell me about the improv The little dots of Eastonâs reply bounce on the bottom of the screen, then disappear and never come back. Not in five minutes, or ten. I picture a new friend walking up to Easton, her forgetting about me. Sheâs already posted a handful of selfies with her roommates on Instagram.
I slide my phone into my pocket and move to the next round, which I also win easily, just like the third and the fourth.
âFantastic!â Defne tells me while we share a Costco bag of Twizzlers on the campus quad. Sheâs surreptitiously smoking a cigarette, which she lit saying, not âBut it an elimination tournament. The more you win, the better your opponents, the harder itâll get.â She notices my frown and bumps her shoulder against mine. âThis is chess, Mallory. Painstakingly engineered to make us miserable.â
Sheâs right. I get a taste on my last match of the day when I find myself dropping a rook, then a bishop against a woman who looks eerily like my middle schoolâs librarian. Not- Mrs.- Larsen is a fidgety, anxious player who takes ages to make a move and whimpers whenever I advance on her. I alternate between doodling on my score sheet and feeling like Iâm at the zoo, staring at the slothâs cage and waiting for it to move. The game drags until the end of the round, when weâre both out of time.
âItâs a draw,â the tournament director says dispassionately, surveying our board. âBlack advances.â
Thatâs me. Iâm moving to the next round because I was at a disadvantage. I know draws are exceedingly common in chess, but I am distressed. Frustrated. Noâ Iâm . With myself.
âI made tons of mistakes.â I tear angrily into the dried apricots Defne handed me. I want to kick the wall. âI should have played rook c6. She could have had me three timesâ did you see how close she came to my king with her bishop? It was such a . I cannot believe I am even allowed within ten feet of a chessboard.â
âYou won, Mallory.â
âIt was a . It qualifies for federal reliefâ I didnât deserve to win.â
âLucky for you, in chess deserving and undeserving wins count the same.â
âYou donât understand. I messed up so manyâ â
Defne puts a hand on my shoulder. I quiet. â
. This feeling you have right now? Remember it. Bottle it. Feed it.â
âWhat?â
âThis is why chess players study, Mallory. Why weâre so obsessed with replaying games and memorizing openings.â
âBecause we hate to draw?â
âBecause we hate feeling like we did anything less than our absolute best.â
The hotel is a five- minute walk from campus. My room is nothing to write home about, except that it is because: privacy. I cannot remember the last time I had access to a bed without the audience of a twelve- year- old goblin and the three- thousandyear- old demon who possesses her guinea pig. I should take advantage of it. I consider watching a movie. Then I consider whipping out my phone, pulling up dating apps, looking for matches in the Philly area. Perfect no-strings- attached opportunity. Plus, orgasms do improve my mood.
Instead I stare out the window, replaying my last game as the sun sets slowly.
Itâs like that time I accidentally sexted Mom. Like that day the entire cheering team walked in on me while I pretended to open the automatic sliding doors with the Force. Like in middle school, when I walked into the teachersâ restroom to wash my hands and found Mr. Carter sitting on the toilet doing a sudoku. Whenever I do something really embarrassing, for days after the incident I live in a state of utter mortification. At night I close my eyes and my brain will yank me back to the deep well of my shame, projecting cringeworthy scenes in excruciating detail against my eyelids.
(Overdramatic? Perhaps. But I sexted my mother. I am .)
My neurons cling to every splinter of embarrassment, wonât let go of the mistakes I made during my matches. I won, fine, but in my second game I left my knight open like . Gross. Disgusting. Appalâ
Someone knocks.
âDefne asked me to take you to the social and introduce you around,â Oz says when I open the door. Heâs staring at his phone.
âThe social?â
âThereâs a reception downstairs, for players who moved to day two. Defne canât go, since itâs only for players. Thereâs free food and booze.â He glances up, assessing. âHow old are you?â
âEighteen.â
He mutters something about babysitting toddlers and not being Mary Fucking Poppins. âThey probably have Sierra Mist somewhere in a cooler. Come.â
Iâm not sure what I expected from a chess party. Easton aside, I never hung out with the PCC people, but they always struck me as quiet and escapism- driven. The players here, though, look more like businessmen, wearing tailored suits and laughing over champagne glasses. There are no sweater vests in sight, and no one is bemoaning the untimely end of . They all seem boisterous and confident. Young. Wealthy. Sure of their place in the world.
One of them notices Oz and leaves his group to approach us. âCongrats on breaking the top twenty.â He glances at meâ first distracted, then appraising, then lingering. An unpleasant shiver travels up my spine. âI didnât know we could bring a plus-one.â
Oh, yeahâthe people in this room? Theyâre 98 percent male.
âIs this your sister?â He must be around my age, and theoretically he should be handsome in a classic, wholesome way, but thereâs something waxy about him, something unsettling in his blue gaze that lifts my hairs.
âWhy the hell would she be my sister?â Oz asks.
âI dunno, man.â He shrugs. âSheâs blond. Youâre blond. And sheâs way too hot to be your girlfriend.â
I stiffen. Surely I misheard.
âMallory is a chess player, .â Ozâs tone drips disdain. Whatever antipathy he may harbor toward me, the Office Intruder, itâs nothing compared with what he feels for this guy.
He doesnât hate me, after all. I might even be his best friend. How heartwarming.
âIf you say so.â His English is perfect, if slightly accented. Vaguely Northern European. âWell, honey, this party is for people who won all their matches, so . . . wait.â He leans back, making a show of studying me. âAre you the girl who trashed Sawyer at the charity tournament?â
âIâ â
âYes, you are. Guys, this is the chick who humiliated Sawyer!â
Iâm not sure whatâs happening, or why, but the group of people (men, all men) Northern Europe was chatting with give us interested glances, then make their way to us.
âWhat did you do before the game?â a tall man in his thirties asks. His accent is so thick, I can barely make out the words. âI need that kind of luck.â
âWas Sawyer having a really bad day?â
âWere you wearing something low- cut? Is that the trick?â
âDoes he know sheâs here?â
âWell, sheâs still alive. So, clearly no.â
Everyone laughs, and I am . . . paralyzed. Mortified. Theyâre staring like Iâm a barely sentient slab of meat, and I feel like a daft child, on display, out of place in my flowy lace sundress. Iâm no withering flower, and over my years with Bob Iâve had my fair share of sparring with older, sexist men, but these people are just soâ so blatantly, rude, Iâm not even sure how I should be responding toâ
âExcuse usââ Oz grabs my elbow and tugs me awayâ âweâre going to go find some food and maybe people who arenât .â
âOh, come on, Nothomb!â
âLearn to take a joke.â
âLet her stayâ bet she wants to get to know us!â
I stumble after Oz, mouth dry, hands shaking. He drags me all the way to the other side of the room, to a table laden with hors dâoeuvres. I think Iâm shell- shocked. âWho they?â
âMalte Koch and his minions.â
I shake my head. Rack my brain. His name sounds familiar, but I canât quite pointâ
âHeâs been world number two for the last couple of years. And an asshole since birth, one can only assume. The slightly older guy who asked if Sawyer knows youâre here is Cormenzana, number seven, the tall Serbian is Dordevic, somewhere around thirty, but the others are about as consequential as a block of concrete with googly eyes. Little shits whose claim to fame is licking Kochâs anus.â He rolls his eyes and reaches blindly for a bacon- stuffed mushroom. Oz Nothomb: unexpectedly, an emotional eater. âI had no intention of introducing you.
should ever talk to them. Their place is on a top- secret mining colony on Mars, if you ask me. Sadly, no one ever asks.â He chews on his mushroom for a moment and then mumbles a stilted âSorry about that.â
I wonder if itâs the first apology of his life. It sure sounds like it. âItâs not your fault. But that was . . . I think I hate them?â
âYeah, Iâll get you the clubâs laminated badge.â He studies me. âAre you going to cry?â
âNo.â
âAre you going to pass eye water?â
â
. Iâm fine. I just . . .â I lean against the wall behind me. âAre they like that with all women?â
Oz snorts. âLook around. How many women do you see?â I donât need to look around. Instead I reach out for a piece of Brie melted on a crust of bread. âMost women in chess decide to skip these events and compete in women- only tournaments. I bet youâre wondering why.â
âTotal mystery.â I put my cheese on a napkin. I have no appetite. âWhat did it mean, that thing about me being alive?â
He sighs. âKoch and his gang it that you made a fool out of Sawyer, because they hate him. But they also hate that you beat him in one go, because Koch fancies himself to be Sawyerâs lifelong rival.â
âBut he isnât?â
âHe cannot compete. No one can compete with Sawyer, really. Heâs been dominating for nearly a decade. I meanââ he pops half a deviled egg in his mouthâ âKochâs an excellent player, if inconsistent. He has moments of brilliance. Heâs forced Sawyer into draws, and once even came close to beating him. But ultimately theyâre not comparable.â
Must be miserable, losing game after game. âKochâs not aware?â
âIâm sure heâs plenty aware, but youâve seen the kind of people he holds court with. Their narrative is that Sawyer is some superevil villain who made chess predictable by being unbeatableâ as though he isnât the reason chess got so big among younger people in the last few years. They make it sound like Sawyerâs Thanos and Kochâs Tony Stark.â He rolls his eyes. âObviously, theyâre Thanos.â
Oz Nothomb: unexpectedly, a Marvel guy. âAre we . . . in middle school again?â
Oz shrugs. âClose enough. Koch just a child, salty because he always ends up dead in FMK. Meanwhile Sawyer gets all the attention, makes serious bank, ends up on âs Most Influential, and sleeps with Baudelaires or whatnotâ â
âBaudelaires?â
âYeah. Itâs this experimental rock bandâ â
âI know who the Baudelaire sisters are.â Sabrina is obsessed. I like their music, too. âSawyer with them?â
âYes. And Koch wants that for himself. As if.â
My head is exploding. âDid heâ Which Baudelaire did Sawyer . . . ?â
âI donât know, Mallory. I do watch reality television.â
âRight.â I look away, chastised. Iâm going to have to google this. Iâm to whip out my phone right now. âWell, the top ten sounds pretty crowded with assholes.â
âMostly just Koch and Cormenzana. And Sawyer, but heâs a better brand. Iâm not gonna make a friendship bracelet for him, but Iâll take a sphincter- clenchingly scary asshole like Sawyer over a slug-slurping-moisture-after-a-rainstorm slimy asshole like Koch any day.â
, I think as a man plucks custard- filled beignets off the table and quickly scurries away, unimpressed with the anus talk.
âAnyway,â Oz concludes, âeveryone else in the top ten is less punchable.â
I smile faintly. âIs âless punchableâ Oz-speak for âniceâ?â
He arches one eyebrow. âAnd what does mean?â
âWell, youâre not the nicest guy Iâve ever met.â
âI am a motherfucking , Greenleaf. And for the record, you and I are hot.â
I only stay at the reception for about thirty minutes. Oz is right, and not everyone in chess is a dick: he introduces me to several people who do not insult me, sexually harass me, or act with a messianic- grade superiority complex. But his group of friends is a few years older than me, and I drift out of conversation when it falls on their wives and graduate education. I feel the occasional side glances from Kochâs gang on me, and cannot quite relax, so I wave goodnight and head back to my room, ready to spend the rest of the evening berating myself over my mistakes.
Until I see the sign in the elevator. Three little words next to the fifth floor:
I head there without thinking it through. The entrance for the pool slides open under my keycard. When I peek inside, Iâm instantly enveloped by heat, chlorine, and silence.
I love swimming. Or whatever that thing I do that passes as swimming isâ float for hours, occasionally move about like a drowning puppy. And hereâs this amazing, deserted pool.
Problem: I donât have a swimsuit. The tattered bikini that barely fit me a cup size ago is somewhere in my dresser at home, and Goliath is probably using it at this very moment to wipe his butt. What I do have, however, is underwear thatâs a bikini. And a strong yearning for a swim.
So I donât think about it too much: I pull my dress over my head, shrug off my sandals, and toss them on the nearest bench. Then I jump in with a loud, messy splash.
, I tell myself fifteen minutes later, drifting over the water and staring at the ceiling. The reflection of the waves on the ceiling is a mangled, distorted chessboard.
By the time I lift myself out, Iâm in better spirits. I screwed up today, but Iâll focus on improving. If I know my weaknesses, I can tailor my training. I train a ridiculous amount anyway.
, a voice reminds me. Itâs either mine or Eastonâs.
, I reply defensively, grabbing my dress and shoes, rubbing chlorine off my eyes.
I stop dead in my tracks.
Iâm not alone anymore. Someone is standing right in front of me. Someone barefooted, whoâs wearing swim trunks. I look up, and up, and up, and up , andâ
My stomach drops. Nolan Sawyer is staring down at me, a faint scowl between his eyes. Iâm dumbfounded by the fact that heâs . . . fit. His chest. His shoulders. His biceps. No one who spends hours a day moving one- ounce pieces around a chessboard has any business looking like that.
âIâ Hi,â I stammer. Because heâs standing right , and I donât know what else to say.
But he doesnât answer. Just stares down, taking in my nowsee- through bra, my panties with little rainbows all over them. The temperature in the pool increases. The gravity, too. Iâm concerned that my legs wonât hold me.
Then I remember what Kochâs friends said:
Fear pops into me.
Nolan Sawyer despises me. Nolan Sawyer wants to murder me. Nolan Sawyer is staring down at me with the sheer soulcutting intensity one reserves for those he hates with the strength of a million bloodthirsty bears.
Didnât he once break another playerâs nasal septum? I remember hearing some stories. Something had happened a tournament, and . . .
Is he going to tear me to pieces? Will the local morgue not know how to put me together? Will they have to call in a professional makeup artist, one of those YouTube beauty gurus who are always making callout videos about each otherâ
Someone runs past us, a blur of dark skin and red trunks, and cannonballs into the pool with a tsunami- like splash. Sawyer mutters something like âShit, Emil,â and itâs the escape chance I was waiting for. I scamper away, feet slapping against the wet floor. Iâm at the door when I make the mistake of looking behind me: Sawyer is staring at me, lips parted, eyes darker than dark.
So I do the only sensible thing: I slam the door in his face, and donât stop running until Iâm in my room, dripping on my bed.
Itâs the second time Iâve met Sawyer. And the second time Iâve retreated like a pinned knight.