
Rediscovering Chess Love
Chapter 3
I sat at Cillian's desk, my fingers trembling slightly as I pulled open the bottom drawer—the one he always kept locked. The small brass key had been hidden in his old chess trophy, a place I would never have thought to look until now.
Inside lay a manila folder with my name scrawled across the top in his familiar handwriting.
My heart pounded as I flipped it open, revealing a collection of papers that made my blood run cold. Chess club membership forms—mine—with the payment information carefully removed. Tournament registration emails printed out and highlighted, each one addressed to me but never mentioned. And beneath them, a handwritten schedule—my practice calendar from last year—with notes in Cillian's precise handwriting:
"Quinn's gallery opening - schedule dinner party same night"
"Regional qualifier - arrange business trip to Portland"
"IM Zhao's masterclass - book client meeting downtown"
Six years of my life, systematically dismantled. Every opportunity carefully sabotaged. Every dream methodically deferred.
I sank to the floor, the papers scattered around me like fallen leaves. The room seemed to spin as the full weight of his betrayal crashed over me. This wasn't just about Quinn. This was about me—about my dreams, my passions, my future.
Cillian had never seen chess as my "hobby." He'd seen it as competition.
My phone buzzed with a text from Quinn: "We're grabbing dinner at Lucien's. Don't wait up!"
I stared at the message, noting the casual assumption that I wouldn't mind, that I would simply accept their evening together as normal. The same way I'd accepted so many things over the years.
With shaking hands, I reached for my laptop and pulled up an email I'd saved months ago—a response to my inquiry about a teaching position at the Portland Chess Academy. I'd never received a follow-up, despite their initial interest.
Before I could second-guess myself, I dialed their number.
"Portland Chess Academy," a crisp voice answered.
"Hi, this is Elia Ramirez," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my voice. "I applied for a position several months ago, and I was wondering if there might still be an opportunity?"
"Elia Ramirez!" The woman's voice brightened immediately. "We've been trying to reach you for weeks! Mr. O'Brien was so impressed with your application and the sample lesson plans you submitted."
My breath caught. "You've been trying to reach me?"
"Yes! We left several messages. The position is still open, and Mr. O'Brien specifically mentioned he was hoping you would join us. He said your approach to teaching was exactly what they were looking for."
Messages. Plural. That Cillian had never mentioned.
"I'd love to come in for an interview," I heard myself say, as if from a distance.
That night, after hanging up with the academy, I couldn't sleep. The apartment felt suffocating, every corner holding memories of compromises I'd made, dreams I'd set aside.
I slipped out into the cool Seattle night, my feet carrying me through familiar streets without conscious direction. First to the community center where I'd first learned to play chess as a child, the fluorescent lights still glowing through the windows even at this late hour.
Then to Volunteer Park, where Cillian and I had shared our first date—a picnic he'd planned, complete with a travel chess set. "You're the only girl I know who can concentrate on a game for hours," he'd said then, making me feel special instead of strange.
And finally to Café Allegro, where I'd spent countless evenings studying Grandmaster games and practicing openings. The barista still remembered me, nodding as I stepped inside.
"Long time no see," she said. "Still working on that queen's gambit?"
"No," I replied softly. "Not for a while now."
I sat in my old corner spot, ordered my usual latte, and watched the clock tick past midnight. Around me, other customers played casual games, their pieces clacking against the boards in a rhythm that once felt like home.
As dawn broke over the city, casting long shadows across the street outside, I realized something fundamental had shifted within me. The chess pieces of my life had been arranged in a pattern I hadn't seen until now—a trap I'd walked into willingly, believing it was love.
But as I stared out at the awakening city, I wondered if Portland might offer a different kind of opening move—one where I wasn't just a pawn in someone else's game.
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