Michael T. Fournier

Hidden Wheel


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yet cohesive, an Early Millennial Mosaic. The symphony of voices about and around Barrett provides critical context for her life, her work, and her love in ways which her paintings, in all their beauty, cannot. Where details were not available, I have taken small reconstructive liberties based on the scholarship, both extant and destroyed, of the best and brightest of my peers.

      I hope that I have done justice to Rhonda Barrett, Maxwell Caughin, and the rest.

      L. William Molyneux

      Professor Emeritus, Early Millennial History

      Freedom Springs University

      29 January 2312

      Chapter One

      Lou Schwartz: The best player got the best table, closest to the door. All those nice pastry smells whenever someone came or went.

      Luna Vallejo: The player at the end table had cars driving by, and the canopy didn’t cover it. Some nights it was hard to see through the fog.

      Lewis Brinkman: Parents brought their kids, hoping they had the next Bobby Fischer on their hands.

      Ralph O’Keefe: It was usually me, down the end. I had to play those little shits. I hate kids, did I mention that?

      Lou Schwartz: I used to give Ralph such a hard time. ‘The Demolisher,’ that’s what I called him.

      Luna Vallejo: Ralph was the one who made the kids cry. I think he enjoyed it.

      Lou Schwartz: I used to ask him if he liked taking their ice cream, too.

      Ralph O’Keefe: Schwartz is a prick. You can tell him. I don’t care.

      Sven Gunsen: Movies about chess brought them, one or two a week. Magazine articles, less.

      Lewis Brinkman: I don’t watch TV. I always knew they’d be coming when a chess movie was reviewed in the Times.

      Ralph O’Keefe: Brinkman didn’t have to deal with any of it. None of the fucking kids. He was the best.

      Luna Vallejo: The only one who ever beat Ralph was the girl. And she beat everybody, eventually, using Brinkman’s lessons.

      Lou Schwartz: Ralph was so embarrassed to lose to her.

      Sven Gunsen: I can’t remember a child ever beating one of us until Rhonda came. Of course I felt bad for Ralph. But he was such a sore loser.

      Ralph O’Keefe: An eight-year-old girl beat me at chess. Of course I was mad. It didn’t help that Schwartz was there, making fun of me.

      Lou Schwartz: ‘The Demolished,’ I called him.

      Luna Vallejo: If [O’Keefe] had a sense of humor about it Schwartz would’ve stopped.

      Lou Schwartz: I knew it pissed him off, so I kept at it.

      Ralph O’Keefe: She asked me if I wanted to play again. I was livid.

      Luna Vallejo: Ralph was caught by surprise that first game, so he slowed the pace. I could’ve told her it was coming.

      Sven Gunsen: He didn’t have the natural ability that some of us have. He learned by playing many, many games, rather than having something like we do.

      Lou Schwartz: He didn’t have sight.

      Ralph O’Keefe: I was always good at counting games—bridge, whist. She started her attack on the fifth. So I started playing defensively on the sixth move of the second game.

      Lewis Brinkman: He aligned his pieces into defensive positions early in that game. And the little girl knew what he was doing.

      Lou Schwartz: I laughed so hard: “Is that the Grunfeld Defense, mister?”

      Ralph O’Keefe: I could’ve killed Schwartz. He doesn’t know when to shut his mouth.

      Luna Vallejo: She knew the defense he was using, but couldn’t play through it. No one had ever told her how to attack a defense like that. My game is very strong against defenses. I never had a chance to talk to her about it.

      Stan Barrett: When we played at home, I followed the diagrams as best I could—it was the only way I could compete with her. She looked through the library books I brought home and memorized the position maps.

      Ralph O’Keefe: She was only eight. She got tired.

      Stan Barrett: I never offered her any real competition. I ran from her attacks for as long as I could.

      Ralph O’Keefe: Once she started to lose focus I went after her. I wasn’t going to lose agin.

      Lou Schwartz: What a jerk, beating up on a little girl like that.

      Sven Gunsen: He launched his offensive when her attention waned.

      Lou Schwartz: It was brutal. She cried.

      Stan Barrett: That was the first time she had ever lost.

      Ralph O’Keefe: She wasn’t the first I made cry, I’ll tell you that.

      Lewis Brinkman: When she said she wanted to play again through her tears I knew that we had something.

      * * *