A/N: Yay, my first Chess fic! Yay! Sorry, I haven't been on in FOREVER, I know. It's called 2 honors classes and marching band. Oh well. R&R please!
Tompkins Square Park, New York City, 1981. One year since Bangkok. Two years since losing her. I whiled away my time wandering the city, trying not to think of her. The park was unusually empty. An old lady with her grandson in a stroller, a kid playing with his dog, a girl sitting at a picnic table with a chess set playing theoretical moves. Chess set….
I went over to her. Her head was bent low over the board figuring out a game against an invisible opponent. I moved the white rook.
"Check."
She looked up. She smiled and moved
her king, so it was safe from my piece.
"So you like chess?" I
asked, sitting down on the bench opposite.
"Well, Mr. Trumper, I
quite obviously do, if I'm sitting in the park with a board and no
opponent, figuring out theoretical moves." She knew me. She did
know her chess.
"That's neat. Not every day you meet a
teenage girl who likes chess."
"Well, I'm not your
average teenage girl."
I smiled slightly.
"Do you want to
play a game?" She offered, gesturing to the board.
"I was
world champion. When do I not want to play?"
She smiled.
"Black or white?"
"I'll go white."
We set up the
board in silence.
I moved a pawn forward two spaces. She
mirrored me on the opposite end.
We played in silence for a bit.
"So what happened to the
badass,
I'm-the-best-player-the-world-has-ever-seen, down with
the Commies Freddie Trumper the world saw in Merano?"
I looked
up at her over my king.
"I've changed since then. Losing my
second, Florence Vassy, losing the title to Sergievsky, working at
Global Television for that bastard De Courcy, it takes its toll."
"Will… will you tell me about it?"
So I did. I told
her everything. About Florence and Anatoly, about Florence's
father, about my childhood, about Bangkok and Global Television, the
Arbiter. We continued to play as I talked, and she didn't interrupt
once.
"I'm sorry, Freddie," she said, reaching across the
table to touch my folded hands.
"It's not your fault."
"I
know, but that doesn't mean I'm not sorry you went through
shit."
I moved my bishop forward.
"Checkmate."
"I knew you'd
win."
"How?"
"You're Freddie Trumper, three time
World Champion. Of course you would win against the 16-year-old high
school champ. "
"Hey, that's nothing to sneeze at. I was
that once, too."
"Bobby Fischer was a pro by my age."
"There's
never going to be another Bobby Fischer, I can almost guarantee
that."
She gave me a strange look
"Well, you and I both
better start heading home. Check your answering machine. I hope to
see you again, Freddie."
With that, she turned and left, board
in one hand, bag of pieces in the other.
I sat there for a bit. That was just weird. Cryptic, chess-playing, 16-year-old-girls. Understanding them is not my specialty. I thought about what she had said. I had nothing better to do, so I took her advice: I went home and checked my answering machine.
"You.
Have. Two. New. Messages," my machine said. "New. Message.
One."
"Freddie, it's Walter. I want you to do some coverage
of the upcoming championship in Glasgow, Scotland. Global's
willing to pay you $3,000 a segment, $4,000 an interview. Give me a
call back so we can arrange a meeting."
Bastard.
"New.
Message. Two."
"Freddie, uh, hi… uh, it's me, Florence."
My heart felt as though it could fly by simply hearing her voice
again. "Um, I'm sure you've heard the championships are going
to be held in Glasgow this year, and I'm fairly sure Walter will
have you do some coverage of it, so… um, anyways, I was just
calling to say hi, I know we haven't talked in a while, and I was
wondering if you were going to be in London at all during the
championship, if, maybe, you wanted to go to dinner, you know, just
for old times' sake. Um, if you can, you have my number. If not,
I'm sure I'll see you in Glasgow. Bye."
I felt as though I would melt. She
had forgiven me to ask me to dinner.
Only as friends, but that
was better than never seeing her again.
Florence.
Oh,
Florence.
How could I let you go?
Walter. I have to call
Walter. Talk him into letting me stay in London in the weeks leading
up to the championship, then go to Glasgow during.
I dialed
his all too familiar number at Global.
"Walter De Courcy's
office, Global Television, this is Karol
speaking."
"Karol,
it's Freddie"
I could practically hear her applying a fresh
coat of lipstick and batting
her eyelashes.
"What can I do
for you, Freddie? Anything in particular?"
"Just put me on
the phone with Walter."
"Oh. Ok. Fine."
Her
disappointment was almost tangible.
"Freddie, m'boy! Good to
see you got my message. Is the pay good with you?"
"Yeah,
actually I was thinking of the lodgings-"
"Don't worry;
we're having you stay in a suite in one of Glasgow's finest
hotels."
"I was actually thinking of heading to London a week
or two earlier, just to see the city and see what Londoners think of
the championship."
"Nothing to do with Florence, I
assume."
"No. Nothing to do with her."
"We'll see
what we can do."
"Thanks."
"Ok, bye,
Freddie."
"Bye."
I placed the phone back on its cradle. I picked up the folded piece of paper that sat on the counter next to the phone. I didn't really need it. I knew it by heart from the countless times I had made those almost phone calls to her. I had lost her my nerve all times previous. I decided I wouldn't now. Not this time. Five rings. Six, seven, eight. Fleetingly, I hoped she wasn't home. It was in vain.
"Hello?"
"Florence,
hi, it's me… Freddie."
"Oh… Freddie, hi. How are
you?"
"I'm doing ok. How about you?"
"Same. New
York treating you well?"
"Relatively. What about
London?"
"Once again, the same. Are you coming?"
"I
think. I told Walter that I wanted to come a week or two early and
see what Londoners think about the championship, then go to Glasgow
to do the coverage."
"Great. I know a great little restaurant
not far from where I live. Call me to pick you up when you get
here."
"I will. Um… have you heard anything from Anatoly
recently?"
I could tell she had tensed. "Some. He's
well."
"That's good. He'll be in Glasgow?"
"Yeah.
Uh, actually, Freddie, I, uh, I have to go…"
"Wait! I
didn't mean to hit a nerve. I'm sorry."
"Did… did you
just apologize? Sincerely?"
"Yeah. Yeah, I did. I told you in
Bangkok. I've changed."
"I guess you have. I… Honestly, I
can't wait to see you again. I've missed you."
I was
shocked. As of last summer, she loathed me. Now she missed me. "I
miss you, too, Florence. I-it's good to hear your voice
again."
"You, too. Now, I really do have to go. I need some
sleep."
"That's right; it's about 11 o'clock
there."
"Yeah. Well, I'll see you soon, Freddie.
Bye."
"Good night, Florence."
I hung up. I was going to
see Florence again. My love, my Florence. My heart
was racing.
How did she know? How did that girl in the park know? How did she
know I needed to check my machine…?
It's only a coincidence. Maybe I struck her as the forgetful type, I convinced myself.