Checkmate

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I remember the time my father taught me chess. On a Sunday afternoon, I sat cross legged at the center table in the drawing room, silently watching him put the pieces in place. “This is the queen, and this is the king”, he said, holding up the pieces. My eyes widened. I reached for them, running my fingers gently along the piece, examining it closely as he set up the board.

He went on to explain the rules to me. “The aim is to protect the king at all costs” he said, showing me how the different pieces moved across the chessboard. It was the most beautiful game I’d seen. I stopped listening. All I saw was a story. A story of two kingdoms, equal in strength, competing for supremacy.

I saw a battle begin before my eyes. The pieces charged towards each other, falling by the dozen as the game unfolded before me. Pawns were mercilessly sacrificed to save the knights and knights grabbed the opportunity to face certain death for their king. The king stayed quiet, almost complacent, surrounded securely by his fortress of devoted subjects while those on the battlefield continued to fall.

Their bodies lay scattered across the table. The fallen whites and blacks tossed carelessly aside as the war waged on. I looked sympathetically at the black Rook, as he lay still on the corner of the table. Overthrown by a mere pawn, he thought, for shame. He hoped his partner would avenge the insult. He lay still, struggling to stay awake, his eyes glued to the battle until the other Rook, with one swift move brought the white Pawn down. The Pawn fell slowly, hitting the ground as the blacks broke into a roaring applause that resounded through the battlefield. The Rook looked at him as he twitched in pain, the piercing wounds in his own body disappearing, if only for a minute. He breathed deep and finally closed his eyes.

Back in the fortress, I saw a woman married to a man who didn’t deserve her. A smart, able, powerful woman who had sworn to protect her husband. A husband who was lazy, unskilled and unfit to be a warrior. He stayed in the fortress, anxiously watching the battle, as pieces fought and fell. He shifted nervously, taking a step any direction he pleased as the enemy got closer. The Queen stood by his side, getting ready for battle, as the fortress shrunk with every minute. She wondered how different it would’ve been if she was the ruler. A trained warrior, she had mastered every move in the book. She could move in any direction, for any length with unmatched skill. Her heart breaking as she watched her soldiers die. She ached to step onto the battlefield, wondering how many lives she could have saved if she wasn’t sworn to the king. Yet, like any gracious woman, she knew her place. She would stand beside her husband until it was time to sacrifice herself for him.

There were few pieces left on the battlefield. The queen bravely took her place in front of her shivering husband. He stood still behind her, as the enemy got closer. The queen lunged forward, striking the white bishop that seemed to be getting too close. The King heaved a sigh of relief. Until, “Checkmate” the voice echoing through the battle field. The Queen turned around in horror as the white Rook and knight laughed menacingly through their yellowing teeth. The king looked at her helplessly as the rook toppled him over, letting him fall off the board and onto the table.

The white King seemed pleased. Looking around at the lands he had conquered. He looked dully at the bodies that lay at his feet. Knights, Pawns, his Queen. He scanned the barren chessboard, his eyes travelling to the fallen king. It seemed like he was lost in deep, peaceful sleep. A pang of jealousy stung him as he stood alone on the cold, lonely battlefield, suddenly craving the luxury of everlasting sleep.  He looked around silently, unsure who had really won the war.

“Tutu, do you understand?” my father asked me. I broke out of my trance and blinked softly. “Yes”.
“Good. Enough for today.” He said, picking up the pieces. I helped him, picking up the fallen pawns, knights and kings to drop them into the box. I marveled at how they looked so peaceful. The different pieces, tangled up in each other, oblivious to the war, the bloodshed, the loss.
Until the same time, next Sunday.

264 responses to “Checkmate”

  1. Reblogged this on GenerationUP.

  2. I never saw chess on this perspective . Amazing!

  3. Reblogged this on walesadiku and commented:
    I thought this is worthy of sharing, happy reading.

  4. Made me remember my first game of chess ever. It was also with my father. 🙂

  5. Being a regular chess player, I simply loved the way you turned the brain-teasing game into a mixture of human emotions. I also admire the comparison of it with the real life scenarios.

    However, I differ on a woman being “gracious” for knowing her place. A woman is not inferior to her husband. In the game there are certain rules to follow and that’s simply a game. But in real life, supporting the inequality and degrading herself is not a trait I could consider to be “gracious”.

    Excluding this, it was a marvelous article. Keep up the good work. 🙂

  6. You checked this mate! Cheers!

  7. I used to love playing chess but then I had to move on, thanks to a lack of people with my expertise. Thank you so much for making me fall in love again with the game.

    This post makes the game look so very grand and shows up emotions that I’ve never experienced before on a chess game.

    Thank you so much.

  8. *applause* beautifully written!!! 🙂

  9. Excellent. For a short time i even started feeling the pain of a plastic rook on the table. Am following u now.

  10. This is Amazing , it brings me back to the time my dad taught me how to play as well

  11. This was a good read, nicely rendered. I encourage you to play more chess and to learn the strength of the king. There are no weak pieces, only inexperienced players. Thank you.

  12. Congratulation very well written

  13. Reblogged this on reclaimed & repurposed and commented:
    Interesting. A much better description than any other I’ve heard.

  14. It was soothing and a gental story, very nice to remember your favourite game and how yoir father tought it to you. Very loving indeed

  15. Reblogged this on viano11's Blog and commented:
    That was beautiful, absolutely beautiful the arts and nature of chest

  16. that’s one of the best stories I ever read as could go through each and every words….wow! just an awesome piece of story…. and thanks a lot!!

  17. Lovely piece of writing

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  19. I remember when i learned to play chess… My cousin taught me. He was playing with his girlfriend, and i desperately wanted to join! They did have to let me win a couple of times tho…..!

  20. Reblogged this on ryanlew1985 and commented:
    :p

  21. That was amazing! I could imagine being a child again and making and intricate twisting story which explained the whole thing. Thank you for writing this

  22. Reblogged this on gracethedisgrace and commented:
    An amazing short story by Epiphany in the Cacophony. A must read!

  23. Wow. I loved every bit of this! This inspires me to dedicate a blog to personification. You picked such a simple, yet amazing topic. Thank you!

  24. Reblogged this on Live Love Laugh and commented:
    As I’m learning WordPress, I’m enjoying other people’s writing. This was a wonderful personification of something so simple! I’m reblogging this to remind me to write something beautiful like this!

  25. That’s pretty deep. I wonder what you think of when you look at a fruit basket.

  26. Steered right into nostalgia! Thanks a ton.

  27. anggitkrispambudi Avatar
    anggitkrispambudi

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  28. That was truly incredible! Very well written!! Hey i am new here so i would really like it if some of you could check my blog out and some motivation could really help! Thank you so much

  29. This blog literally changed my perspective about chess. Well written!

  30. Chess is, by far, one of my favorite games. Thank you for bringing the pieces to life.

  31. I don’t play chess but I enjoyed what you’ve written. Makes me want to learn the game!

  32. I think one of the aspects of chess that doesn’t get examined very often is the fact that there is no element of chance. There is no shuffled deck of cards and there is no roll of dice. The pieces always begin lined up the same way and from start to finish there is only your skill and your opponent’s skill with them (unless someone cheats/somehow plays a mind game… and of course there’s the very slight tactical advantage white gains from starting out in the active position rather than the reactive one). In this respect chess is not like war, and certainly not like life. But it does indeed make for good narrative.

    1. You’re right, chess is not about chance. But I differ with you whether like war or like life. Chess is about choice. For each individual, and for each choice that individual must make, there are usually many options to choose from, but only 1 is the best. Learn how to choose the right one and you win.

  33. Beautiful. Absolutely beautiful. This in itself is like poetry in action. A little movie playing out in my head.

  34. Crystal Bennett Avatar

    Lovely 🙂

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