Halfway through my work in progress FIANCHETTO, I have this flashback to when Victor (my chess prodigy)first plays the game. As I said before, this is not a YA novel, despite these chapters featuring children.
The formatting has changed for the blog.
2036:
A Field of Red and Black
Through
a veil of dark foliage a lone strawberry gleamed. Dew hung heavy on
the serrated edge of each leaf, like beads of crystal on green
velvet. The boy's sleeves and the knees of his jeans were already
soaked. He reached his small hand through the damp, silvered leaves
and found the fat red berry. Careful not to crush it, he pinched the
stem in two and extracted the strawberry intact. In the past he'd
spoiled too many being impatient. Spring strawberries were a cash
crop for the Farm, and his mother wouldn't stand for anyone
mutilating the best berries by rough picking.
Victor
Leventon squatted between long rows of low berry plants, looking down
the furrow to where the girl worked. Her hands moved with quick
jerks, snatching fruit from the plants and tossing them backward in
one motion. The wicker tray behind her held a pile of mangled
berries. He glanced at his own brimming container, where every berry
was sorted by size, with the largest ones in the center and the
lesser specimens lining the edges.
Behind
him, Chloe complained loudly there were no berries for her to pick.
"You
took 'em all!" she exclaimed. Victor was very thorough. Any
berry larger than the tip of his thumb was fair game.
"Move
ahead," he suggested.
Chloe
stomped past him, went down on one knee, and started grabbing berries
in the row ahead of him. Every fourth or fifth one she cast a
withering glare back at him. She was annoyed Victor had finished
ahead of her since every kid in the berry patch this morning had to
fill their tray before lunch. His efficiency would keep Chloe in the
field longer.
He
stood, gathering the wide wicker tray in his arms. It was a lot for a
six year-old to carry, and he wobbled a bit as he tried to balance
the load while treading the softly plowed earth. Approaching Chloe he
paused.
"Whatsa
matter?" she sneered. "Go around. You afraid?"
He
was. It would be just like her to trip him, make him spill his
morning's labor in the dirt. Then he'd have to start over again, and
Chloe would gather up the best berries he'd dropped.
"Hey!"
The
girl called from down the row. Victor and Chloe looked at her. At
nine, she was older--and meaner--than either of them.
"S'there
a problem?"
Victor
shook his head. Chloe shrugged broadly and vowed nothing was wrong.
She knew better than to cross the older girl. Chloe still had the
fading remnant of a black eye from their last encounter.
"Get
on with it then."
He
eased by Chloe and walked quickly down the furrow. When he reached
the other girl, her head was down and she was savagely snagging
berries again. Sometimes she pulled so hard she tore plants out,
roots and all.
"Thanks,"
he said, standing over her.
"Yeah,
sure. I don't need Miss Chloe making trouble this morning."
He
checked her tray. It was a mess. Mashed berries, shredded leaves, and
a generous layer of loam over everything.
Victor
put his tray down and picked hers up. He shook it carefully side to
side. Bits of leaf blew off, and some of the dirt sifted through the
slats. Her berries were still rough, but at least they were cleaner.
"What're
you doing?" she said sharply.
"Fixing
your tray."
"Who
said you could?"
He
pretended not to hear. After blowing off more torn leaves and dirt,
he set her tray down and added double handfuls of berries from his
own overfilled one. She protested--mildly--but he continued until her
tray was nearly full. Then he walked on. Govinder was waiting at the
end of the row with a handcart full of the morning's harvest.
"Hey,"
she called after him. "Why?"
Victor
looked back over his shoulder. He didn't know why, but he said, "Why
not?"
At
the handcart, Govinder took Victor's berries and set them, tray and
all, on a balance scale. Satisfied with the weight, he slid the heavy
tray into the rack on the cart.
"Very
good, young man," he said. Govinder was a newcomer, and didn't
know everyone's name yet. He was older than most of the adults on the
Farm, past forty. Victor had heard Frances say she didn't think he
would stay long. He was a 'huggy,' she said, which in Frances-speak
meant he was at Fysikós Farm to meet women, and not to live a truly
natural life.
He
hung a yellow painted wooden disk strung on a piece of string around
Victor's neck. This was to show the boy had completed his morning
chore satisfactorily.
"I
saw you help her," he said in a low, friendly voice. "You
like her?" Victor didn't answer. "It's okay! Watch
out--she's a rough one!"
He
was thirsty, and his hands and knees were dirty from picking, so
Victor did not linger. He climbed the hill above the strawberry field
and went to the wash house. Some of the men were working there,
enlarging the end of the building to hold more shower stalls. They
called out to Victor as he entered. Waving, he went to one of the big
soapstone sinks and washed his hands. Same old bars of white Ivory
soap at every sink. It was the only soap Frances would buy. It was
natural.
Done
with chores till after lunch, Victor drifted back to the Hall. This
was the large, open barrack where the children of Fysikós Farm all
lived together. It was a single long room, built balloon fashion like
a camp shelter. The long walls on either side were lined with wooden
bunks, three tiers high. Younger kids slept in the low positions,
older kids higher up. Victor had been here a year since outgrowing
the Farm's nursery.
At
the far end of the Hall, where the bunks stopped, was an open area.
There were two tables ringed with chairs, a few rag rugs, and
home-made beanbag chairs made of denim and canvas, stuffed with
pulverized corn cobs. Victor spied two boys, Shawn and Jesus.
Everyone called Jesus 'Hay,' after the way his name was pronounced in
Spanish, Hay-soos.
"Mister
Victor!" Hay said.
"Hey
Hay."
The
boys were crouched on the plank floor, flicking checkers at standing
targets consisting of random dominoes and other jetsam of the
children's games box. Victor watched as red and black disks flew,
knocking down targets with a satisfying clatter.
Shawn
took more careful aim and clipped a tall figure shaped like one of
the sundae glasses Victor had seen in the soda shop in Pittsboro. The
black figure went flying. Victor ran to retrieve it.
"What
is it?" he asked, returning the piece.
"A
king," Hay said. "You know, a chess king."
Victor
had seen the older kids playing chess sometimes, but he didn't
understand it. He studied the wooden figure in his hand. It was
cylindrical, with a bulging, curved center like the chair legs in the
adults' cabins. The bottom was flat and covered by a circle of green
felt. At the top the king was shaped like a sundae, but instead of a
cherry on top, there was a cross.
"What
does the cross mean?"
"Means
he's the king," Shawn said. He thumped a red checker so hard it
caromed off the back wall and flew back at them. Hay yelped with
delight and dodged the missile.
"King
of what?" Victor persisted.
Shawn
sat up. He waved Victor over. "C'mere," he said. "I'll
show ya."
"Uh-uh,"
Hay said. "He's a baby, he don't know anything."
Shawn
was not dissuaded. "Come here, Vic." He told Hay to grab
the chess board out of the games box. Grimacing, Hay dragged a hand
through the wooden chest until he found the board. He slapped it on
the floor in front of Shawn.
"Look,"
Shawn said, "this is how you play chess."
Victor
sat down, folding his legs under him. The board he saw was no
mystery; it was a cardboard checker board, covered in worn, glossy
paper. Each alternating red and black square was edged in gold. Shawn
turned it halfway around, placing the folded seam parallel between
them.
Without
being asked, Hay rounded up stray chess pieces they'd been using as
targets. There were two colors, black and white. Some of the pieces
were twinned while others were unique.
"This
is the king," Shawn said, holding up a white version of the
piece Victor still had. "He goes here." He put the white
king on a black square, on the back row in the center of the board.
"Next to him goes the queen."
The
queen was almost as big as the king, but it had no cross on top. It
had a little ball, like a cherry on a dish of ice cream . . .
Victor's stomach gurgled. He was hungry, as usual.
Outside
the royal couple (as Shawn called them) went two pointy pieces that
looked to Victor like a pair of rockets. "Bishops," Shawn
called them. Outboard of them were a pair of horse-headed figures.
"These
are knights."
Victor
knew from Farm school what knights were, but these looked like
horses, not guys in iron helmets.
"That's
just what they call 'em," Shawn explained. He held up a stubby
piece with a notched edge circling the top. "This is a rook."
"That's
a castle," Hay countered.
"It
looks like part of a castle, but it's called a rook!"
They
argued about it until Victor finished setting up his black pieces in
imitation of Shawn's.
"Shut
up, Hay." Shawn picked up a handful of identical little tokens.
"These are pawns. They're like army soldiers. They go in front."
He
lined the eight pawns ahead of the bigger pieces. Victor did the
same.
"White
goes first."
Victor
said, "Why?"
"'Cause
it always does. It's a rule, like in checkers."
"Black
goes first in checkers. 'Coal before fire,'" Hay intoned.
"Well,
White goes first in chess!"
Shawn
explained how the pieces moved, shifting each example back and forth.
Hay kibitzed, offering corrections when he thought Shawn said
something wrong.
"How
do you win?" the younger boy asked.
"You
checkmate the enemy king by threatening to capture him--but you don't
really. As long as he can't escape, that's checkmate." He set up
an example with the black king caught in the white queen's grip, and
protected from capture herself by a supporting bishop.
"But
the king isn't captured," Victor objected.
"Doesn't
matter. He will be."
"So
the game stops before the king dies?"
The
older boys exchanged smirks at Victor's deliberate reasoning, but
Shawn agreed. Checkmate meant the king was about to die, and nobody
could save him.
"Let's
play," Victor said. Hay groaned.
Shawn
won in eight moves. Hay high-fived him, chortling. Victor stared at
the board for a long time. He was so quiet so long Shawn thought he
was going to cry.
"Hey,
I lost all my first games too," he said. "That's how you
learn."
Victor
pushed the chess men back to their starting positions. "Play
again."
Hay
rolled his eyes. Shawn shrugged. "Might as well." It
shouldn't take long to beat a six-year old again.
Ten
moves in, Shawn's over-confidence vanished. Victor evaded his simple
traps and counter-attacked. Hay, bored with his companions'
absorption, went back to flicking checkers against the wall.
Sixteen
moves. Twenty . . . twenty-eight. Victor's queen thrust forward,
menacing Shawn's rook on its corner square. He studied the situation
frantically, then spotted a wonderful move. His knight swung wide,
catching Victor's queen and one of his rooks in a twin attack, called
a 'fork.' Without hesitation Victor moved his rook to safety. In
triumph Shawn captured the black queen.
In
the next moment, Victor pushed his rook to White's back row. There
was nothing there to stop him, nor could the White king escape.
"Checkmate."
"What?"
Hay left his target practice and hunched over the board. "Shawn
man, he won?"
Shawn
shook his head in disbelief. He held out his hand. Victor gazed at it
dumbly until his friend prompted him to shake it.
"Good
job," Shawn said.
At
that moment a pack of older kids burst noisily into the Hall: Chloe,
Michelle, Harris, Lex, and May. They chattered loudly, ignoring the
younger boys. Chloe strode right through where Victor, Shawn, and Hay
sat, trampling the chess board and kicking over the pieces.
"Cow!"
Hay exclaimed.
She
made an obscene gesture and kept going, into a closet at the end of
the room to visit the chamberpot.
"Hope
you get splinters!" Hay called. From behind the door Chloe
laughed.
The
older kids flopped in their bunks and kept up their running
commentary about the morning's sensation. Apparently Frances had come
out to inspect the harvest and ended up chewing out the girl Victor
gave his strawberries to. When he heard that, Victor stopped moving
chess pieces and listened closely.
"Her
tray was a mess!" Michelle declared. "Squashed berries,
lots of leaves and dirt. Frances reminded her we can't sell ruined
berries at the Farmers' Market."
"What'd
she say?" asked Lex, swinging his feet off the side of his bunk.
"The
usual: 'Who gives a shit, Frances?'"
"She
didn't!"
Michelle
held up a hand. "Swear! She stood there while Frances had a fit
at her and said those five words!"
"What'd
Frances do?" May wondered. She was afraid of Frances. She was
afraid of lots of things.
"She
handed her the messed-up tray and said, 'This is all you get to eat,
until they're gone. And don't throw them away, or you'll nothing
after you do for twenty-four hours!'"
"Harsh!"
said Harris.
The
girl walked in. Talk died. Dry-eyed, Frances' nemesis went to her
bunk, at the end of the row by the game area. With one hand she swung
up to her top bunk and turned her back to the room.
Chloe
emerged from the closet. Finding the room awash in awkward silence
she said, "What?"
From
her bunk the girl growled, "Shut the fuck up!"
"Dirty
mouth," Michelle muttered.
"Better
a dirty mouth than a dirty snitch!"
Stiffly,
the older kids filed out, some looking back at the unmoving girl in
her bunk. Feeling awkward and exposed, Shawn and Hay got up and
bolted for the exit, leaving scattered checkers, chess pieces, and
dominoes behind.
Victor
remained. The girl said, "You leaving too?"
"No."
"You're
not scared of me?"
"No."
She
turned over and looked down at him. He sat on the floor, legs
straddling the checkerboard.
"You're
weird."
Victor
brushed off Chloe's dirty footprint and set up the chess men again.
He'd thought of another way he could have beaten Shawn four moves
earlier--and as he was arranging the pieces, he saw another way two
moves before that.