Monday, January 28, 2008

The Bishop Moves Diagonally

What happened to you, that boy whose sister
Gave him a chess set when he was six
Born in America, during the Holocaust
What a strange game you would play, Bobby Fischer

Your mother was Jewish, her husband Hans, German
He was suspected of Communist sympathies
He could not come here so you never knew him
Your real father was a Hungarian Jew, Paul

When you learned the bishop moves diagonally
You said: “All I want to do, ever, is play chess.”
New York in the fifties, what an amazing place
Boom times and beatniks, a world of possibilities

Mom left you alone with your sister in Brooklyn
And moved to England, across the Atlantic
While you were playing your pawns and rooks
Did you feel that she had abandoned you?

Soon you were named the world’s youngest grand master
The shiniest star in your strange galaxy
To its formulas and strategies you would bring
Your burning talent and something beyond

A Jewish agency arranged my adoption
Just a few miles away from where you were
Spending your days perfecting your play
And learning to see things that others could not

You were losing a game to Robert Byrne
But with a few moves you made a comeback
For a checkmate so stunning that they said
You were like Rembrandt, or Brahms, or Shakespeare

We moved to L.A. and my dad’s friend Maurice
Came from New York and gave me a chess set
And showed me that the bishop moves diagonally
I taught my dad and we’d play together

You lost to the Soviets, your game went badly
Even so, you accused them of cheating
And dropped out of championships for five years
Until the rules were changed to your liking

My dad and mom took me to San Diego
We crossed the border to shop in Tijuana
We bought a cheap steel-stringed guitar
And a big, beautiful wooden chess set

Soviet missiles were aimed at my neighborhood
Targeting Lockheed, Rocketdyne and Hughes
We kept hearing we could die any day
And we believed it because it was true

One morning in ’71 the earthquake hit
Shaking so hard that our pool splashed half empty
For a few seconds I thought the bombs had all fallen
And it was the end of everyone and everything

Later that year my dad bought me tickets
To see Led Zeppelin at the Forum in Inglewood
So I heard the song, “Stairway to Heaven”
The first time the band ever played it in public

The concert opened with “Immigrant Song”
A driving guitar riff and pounding drums
“We come from the land of the ice and snow”
Then “Dazed and Confused” with a violin bow



Soon you would take the role of our champion
Against the Soviets, like David faced Goliath
With no armor, naked, just a slingshot
You had no missiles, but would play Boris Spassky

An arena of rock fans would cheer Jimmy Page
When he played the guitar lines for “Whole Lotta Love”
While all around the world, not thousands but millions
Were rooting for you, Bobby, millions and millions

So you went to the land of the ice and snow
You complained about noise, you were surly, impatient
But your game was so bold, so new and so strong
Even Spassky applauded one of your checkmates



That was about when I stopped seeing my friends
I was tired of them, they didn’t like me much either
I’d stay home Friday nights and set up the pieces
To play two or three quiet games with my dad

Spassky left before the tournament ended
No longer respectful, he phoned in his forfeit
And that’s when you became the world champion
The greatest player in the history of chess

You gave $61,000 to a Pasadena church
Jesus would come back in ’75, they said
But he didn’t so you walked out on them
You should have asked for your money back, Bobby

Three years after your triumph in Iceland
You were living alone in an acquaintance’s basement
They say she was your only friend in the world
A little old lady from Pasadena

One day the cops thought that you were burglar
You were arrested then you claimed they abused you
You wrote a 14-page pamphlet and called it
“I Was Tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse”

I didn’t know you were there then, so close
Just a few miles from me down the freeway
I wouldn’t have visited you, though, Bobby
I had lost interest in you and your game

I don’t think my father ever really knew
How much I loved playing chess with him
Those Friday nights when I was fourteen and fifteen
Enjoying his quiet company, his kindness

You refused a challenge from Karpov
So they took away your title of champion
I was in college, working nights at a porn theater
I’d sit in the stairway, reading Mishima and Ibsen

I finished my studies in Paris and got a job there,
Kasparov beat Karpov in a weird tournament
They played the same game over and over!
You were invisible, a penniless hermit

In French, the king is le roi, the queen is la reine
But the bishop is not l’eveque. The bishop is
Le fou – the fool, or literally: crazy
Is that because the bishop moves diagonally?

I flew from France for my father’s funeral
It was my worst day, Dad, and not just because
We would never play chess again
I never thanked you for all you had done for me

I moved back to L.A. to take care of my mom
The Soviet Union was signed into oblivion
With the stroke of a pen that Gorbachev borrowed
From an American who was standing next to him

Slobo was doing his ethnic cleansing
I was visiting Paris and I was told
A Yugoslav friend went to look for his mom there
And to this day I don’t know if he found her.

You didn’t care, Bobby, you played there anyway
You beat Spassky again and won three million dollars
But you lost your country and was stripped of your passport
You placed the blame on a Jewish conspiracy

Then Kasparov faced the Big Blue computer
In a chess match designed to determine
If a computer could outmatch a champion
A machine cannot love and a machine cannot hate

You were drifting from country to country
They say you were in Germany and Hungary
Were you looking for the fathers you never knew,
The communist husband, the Jewish lover?

One winter morning I buried mom next to dad
The porn place I’d worked at turned into a theater
They staged “The Doll’s House” there one weekend
The dream was a world or the world was a dream?

Your mother and sister had died, Bobby Fischer
And you could not come home to tell them goodbye
But you would not sit quietly and play random chess
There was still something more that you needed to say

Arabs crashed planes into twin towers
Across the river from where you grew up
Just down the street from Washington Square
Where you were perfecting your game when you were young

How could you rejoice over the blood,
The severed limbs, people burning and falling?
They were not chess pieces, Bobby Fischer,
Not pawns, not knights. How could you think that?

Your words were brought to us across the Pacific
Manila radio let you describe your approval
As crowds crossed the bridge back to your old Brooklyn
Fleeing the chaos that delighted you so

Later, eight months in a Japanese jail
While the U.S. tried to bring you back to stand trial
But then you were granted refuge in Reykjavik
You went back to the land of the ice and snow

Into the mist you would fade, matching moves
With your wife – she was a chessmaster, too
Could you enjoy the midnight sun with her?
Or did you think it was another Jewish plot?

I went to New York six months after 9/11
And spent a spring morning at Ground Zero
The next day the woman in charge of adoption files
Had just left her office and I still haven’t called her

New York at a new century’s dawn
What an amazing place, a world of the wonderful
“The Graduate” on Broadway, the ballet at Lincoln Center
And the Darger exhibit at the Folk Art Museum

Five years later, Led Zeppelin played Wembley
A million people were bidding for tickets
To hear what I’d heard back in ’71
You were dying in the land of the ice and snow

Bobby Fischer, you could have stopped
And rebuilt all of your ruins
At the end, could you see the missing piece?
The bishop moves diagonally.

Dad, even if you were still alive
You might be too old for chess
Still, I wish we could have kept playing
Those Friday night games forever