The Immortal Game
The Board That Never Reset
In the attic of the Vanderbilt Chess Club, there was a game that had been left unfinished for 64 years.
The pieces were frozen mid-battle—a black queen poised to strike, a white knight sacrificing itself. No one dared touch it.
Until Lena Carter, a prodigy with a habit of breaking rules, moved the pawn.
The moment it clicked into place, the air smelled of gunpowder and old perfume.
And across from her, the black king’s piece turned its head.
1: The Opponent Who Breathed
His name was Nikolai Zaitsev, though the club records listed him as "Missing, 1958."
"You shouldn’t have come back," he murmured, advancing a bishop. His fingers were translucent.
Lena’s pulse thundered as the pieces moved themselves:
- A rook’s path traced the exact route of a bullet through a window.
- A captured pawn wept silver tears onto the board.
- And the white queen—carved in Lena’s likeness—whispered: "He’s cheating."
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