Anatoly Valeriovich Sergievsky (
chesspolitik) wrote2011-02-07 03:56 pm
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A Battleground for Rival Ideologies
If Anatoly had been thinking more clearly, he would have been suspicious of the little reel in the bookcase bearing the label of "Chess 2009". The bookcase had been on a cycle of giving him things he didn't like or need, so the fact that it was cooperating now should have registered as a bad sign.
None of this crossed his mind, however, as he painstakingly threaded the reel to the projector. Whatever it might be - a documentary on the history of chess or showing of a match between two grandmasters, he was certain he was going to enjoy it. This was clearly about his beloved game and there was just no way that it could show him something he would not like.
His first inkling that he was terribly wrong about all of this was the very first shot showing an enormous concert hall. His mouth dropped open as he heard the announcer call "Josh Groban" and he saw himself walk across the stage. The case fell from his fingers as he saw Freddie follow after someone who bore a rather strong resemblance to Maureen. What was this?
The concert started but things still failed to make any kind of sense. Who would write a concert about chess? Why would someone write a concert about chess? He wasn't sure which was more disconcerting - that or that people who looked exactly like him and Freddie appeared to be in it.
When the song about what appeared to the history of chess ended and the main singer with the gloves started speaking, he was horrified. This wasn't a story about chess, this was about him. Him and Freddie and what happened between them and if he could have found the strength to get up to shut the damned thing off, he would have.
He was too shocked to move, to do anything but watch his nightmares play out in song and bizarre chorus. The only comfort he could find was that at least they had gotten Freddie behaving like a bastard right.
None of this crossed his mind, however, as he painstakingly threaded the reel to the projector. Whatever it might be - a documentary on the history of chess or showing of a match between two grandmasters, he was certain he was going to enjoy it. This was clearly about his beloved game and there was just no way that it could show him something he would not like.
His first inkling that he was terribly wrong about all of this was the very first shot showing an enormous concert hall. His mouth dropped open as he heard the announcer call "Josh Groban" and he saw himself walk across the stage. The case fell from his fingers as he saw Freddie follow after someone who bore a rather strong resemblance to Maureen. What was this?
The concert started but things still failed to make any kind of sense. Who would write a concert about chess? Why would someone write a concert about chess? He wasn't sure which was more disconcerting - that or that people who looked exactly like him and Freddie appeared to be in it.
When the song about what appeared to the history of chess ended and the main singer with the gloves started speaking, he was horrified. This wasn't a story about chess, this was about him. Him and Freddie and what happened between them and if he could have found the strength to get up to shut the damned thing off, he would have.
He was too shocked to move, to do anything but watch his nightmares play out in song and bizarre chorus. The only comfort he could find was that at least they had gotten Freddie behaving like a bastard right.
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By the end of the song, he managed to push Sergievsky away with a hard shove and he moved to the far end of the couch, turning his face away. He didn't want the other man to see that there were angry tears in his eyes.
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The scene changed and he glanced over out of idle curiosity and wished he hadn't. Svetlana and Florence were singing. About him. He forced himself to keep watching, though he would have preferred to shut the damned thing off.
"I am sorry," he whispered and buried his face in his hands. He had tried, he truly had but he was seeing now that he hadn't tried hard enough.
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That was why Freddie hated himself and watching this only made it worse. It only made him see that there was only one time when he had actually threw the Commies and his own...his own handler the finger and been true to the game and himself.
"They manipulated us both." It wasn't really accepting the apology, but letting Anatoly know that they were in the same boat.
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He had also seen that his view of himself as the innocent, blameless champion against Freddie's disgraceful villain was hardly accurate or fair. His actions had not all been perfect and he caused harm by not taking things into consideration. Freddie had his own pain, no matter how much he might have tried to hide it.
It had taken some time but as that song had said - it had took time to understand the man.
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"You should know what being outplayed feels like. I outplay you all the time."
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He looked from the screen to Freddie and then back again. "Are you trying to help me?"
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He had been so sure that decision was the right one. If there was any chance her father was alive, then he didn't want to be the one responsible for keeping her from him. He would lose, she would see her beloved father and her happiness was worth any number of chess games.
But he hadn't known the things he knew now, he hadn't seen the depths of Walter and Molokov's treachery. If he were asked to make this decision again... he wasn't sure what he would do.
"No one came and told me about your King's Indian Defense, though. Perhaps that might have made a difference." He was only joking. Mostly.
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What decision would this Anatoly make? He thought he knew but he couldn't be sure. In this version as in his life, there was too many complications going on and no real time to make a decision.
The scene changed and he blinked, tugging on Freddie's shirt to get his attention. "Tal? Lasker? Are they - are they naming the champions?"
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"What would you have done?" he asked quietly.
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He paused for a moment, watching the scene and wishing dearly that he could strangle Molokov through the screen. "All through my game, I struggled to know what to do, what was the right thing."
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The more he watched, the more he became convinced that winning the game was the only option. This Florence hardly seemed to understand the pressures he was facing and Svetlana would always despise him for choosing chess over family. Losing to some nobody clearly under Molokov's thumb was unthinkable.
Win and return home. It was the only way this could be played.
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His back hit the couch when Anatoly made that final move. "Shit." He was slowly starting to grin, though. He'd done it. For once, the pair of them had put Florence behind them and they'd come together for one thing: chess. It was like some huge weight was off his shoulders.
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All the same, what did it really change? Perhaps they wouldn't show it, but he knew he would have had to pay for that act of defiance sooner or later. It wouldn't be Freddie who had to deal with the consequences.
"If only that was the end of the story," he sighed quietly.
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"Why couldn't they let us play chess? That is all I ever wanted."
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