The Love Hypothesis: Chapter 21
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âHolden sent a message for you.â
Olive looked away from the window and to Malcolm, whoâd turned off airplane mode the second theyâd landed in Charlotte for their layover. âHolden?â
âYeah. Well, itâs technically from Carlsen.â
Her heart skipped a beat.
âHe lost his phone charger and canât text you, but he and Holden are on their way back to SFO.â
âAh.â She nodded, feeling a small rush of relief. That explained Adamâs silence. He hadnât been in touch since last night. Sheâd worried that heâd been arrested and was pondering emptying her savings account to help cover his bail. All twelve dollars and sixteen cents. âWhereâs their layover?â
âNo layover.â Malcolm rolled his eyes. âDirect flight. Theyâll be at SFO ten minutes after us, even though theyâre only now leaving Boston. Eat the rich.â
âDid Holden say anything about . . .â
Malcolm shook his head. âTheir plane is about to leave, but we can wait for them at SFO. Iâm sure Adam will have some updates for you.â
âYou just want to make out with Holden, donât you?â
Malcolm smiled and leaned his head against her shoulder. âMy kalamata knows me well.â
It seemed impossible that sheâd been gone for less than a week. That all the chaos had unfolded in the span of a few days. Olive felt dazed, shell-shocked, as though her brain was winded from running a marathon. She was tired and wanted to sleep. She was hungry and wanted to eat. She was angry and wanted to see Tom get what he deserved. She was anxious, as twitchy as a damaged nerve, and she wanted a hug. Preferably from Adam.
In San Francisco, she folded her now-useless coat inside her suitcase and then sat on it. She checked her phone for new messages while Malcolm went to buy a bottle of Diet Coke. There were several from Anh, just checking in from Boston, and one from her landlord about the elevator being out of commission. She rolled her eyes, switched to her academic email, and found several unread messages flagged as important.
She tapped on the red exclamation point and opened one.
Olive gasped. She covered her mouth with her hand, and immediately opened another email.
There were two more emails. Four total from cancer researchers, all following up on Dr. Aslanâs introductory message and saying theyâd love having Olive in their labs. She felt a surge of happiness so violent, it almost made her dizzy.
âOl, look who I ran into.â
Olive shot up to her feet. Malcolm was there, holding Holdenâs hand, and barely a step behind themâ
Adam. Looking tired, and handsome, and as large in real life as heâd been in her mind for the past twenty-four hours. Looking straight at her. Olive recalled the words heâd said last night in the restaurant and felt her cheeks heat, her chest constrict, her heart beat out of her skin.
âHear me out,â Holden started without even saying hi, âthe four of us: double date. Tonight.â
Adam ignored him and came to stand next Olive. âHow are you?â he asked in a low tone.
âGood.â For the first time in days, it wasnât even a lie. Adam was here. And all those emails were in her inbox. âYou?â
âGood,â he replied with a half smile, and she had a weird feeling that much like her, he wasnât lying. Her heart picked up even more.
âWhat about Chinese?â Holden interjected. âEveryone like Chinese here?â
âIâm cool with Chinese,â Malcolm muttered, though he didnât seem enthusiastic at the idea of a double date. Likely because he didnât want to sit across from Adam for an entire meal and relive the trauma of his graduate advisory committee meetings.
âOlive?â
âUm . . . I like Chinese.â
âPerfect. So does Adam, soââ
âIâm not having dinner out,â Adam said.
Holden frowned. âWhy?â
âI have better things to do.â
âLike what? Oliveâs coming, too.â
âLeave Olive alone. Sheâs tired, and weâre busy.â
âI have access to your Google Calendar, asshole. Youâre not busy. If you donât want to hang out with me, you can just be honest.â
âI donât want to hang out with you.â
âYou little shit. After the week we just had. And on my birthday.â
Adam recoiled slightly. âWhat? Itâs not your birthday.â
âYes, it is.â
âYour birthday is April tenth.â
âIs it, though?â
Adam closed his eyes, scratching his forehead. âHolden, weâve talked daily for the past twenty-five years, and I have been to at least five Power Rangersâthemed birthday parties of yours. The last one was when you turned seventeen.â
Malcolm attempted to cover his laugh with a cough.
âI know when your birthday is.â
âYou always had it wrong, I was just too nice to tell you.â He clasped Adamâs shoulder. âSo, Chinese to celebrate the blessing of my birth?â
âWhy not Thai?â Malcolm interjected, addressing Holden and ignoring Adam.
Holden made a whiny noise and started saying something about the lack of good larb in Stanford, something Olive would have normally been interested in hearing, except thatâ
Adam was looking at her again. From several inches above Holdenâs and Malcolmâs heads, Adam was looking at her with an expression that was half apologetic, half annoyed, and . . . all intimate, really. Something familiar theyâd shared before. Olive felt something inside her melt and suppressed a smile.
Suddenly, dinner seemed like a great idea.
It will be fun, she mouthed at him while Holden and Malcolm were busy arguing about whether they should just try that new burger place.
It will be excruciating, he mouthed back barely parting his lips, looking resigned and put-upon and just so amazingly Adam that Olive couldnât help but burst into laughter.
Holden and Malcolm stopped arguing and turned to her. âWhat?â
âNothing,â Olive said. The corner of Adamâs mouth was curling up, too.
âWhy are you laughing, Ol?â
She opened her mouth to deflect, but Adam beat her to it.
âFine. Weâll go.â He said âweâ like he and Olive were a âwe,â like it had never been fake after all, and her breath caught in her throat. âBut Iâm excused from any birthday-related outings for the next year. Actually, make it the next two. And veto on the new burger place.â
Holden fist-pumped, and then frowned. âWhy veto on burgers?â
âBecause,â he said, holding Oliveâs eyes, âburgers taste like foot.â
â
âWE SHOULD START by addressing the obvious,â Holden said, chewing on the complimentary appetizers, and Olive tensed in her seat. She wasnât sure she wanted to discuss the Tom situation with Malcolm and Holden before talking about it with Adam alone.
As it turned out, she shouldnât have worried.
âWhich is that Malcolm and Adam hate each other.â
Next to her in the booth, Adam frowned in confusion. Malcolm, who was sitting across from Olive, covered his face with his palms and groaned.
âI am reliably informed,â Holden continued, undeterred, âthat Adam called Malcolmâs experiments âsloppyâ and âa misuse of research fundsâ during a committee meeting, and that Malcolm took offense to that. Now, Adam, Iâve been telling Malcolm that you were probably just having a bad dayâmaybe one of your grads had split an infinitive in an email, or your arugula salad wasnât organic enough. Do you have anything to say for yourself?â
âUh . . .â Adamâs frown deepened, and so did Malcolmâs facepalm. Holden waited pointedly for an answer, and Olive watched it all unfold, wondering if she should take out her phone and film this car crash. âI have no recollection of that committee meeting. Though it does sound like something I would say.â
âGreat. Now tell Malcolm it wasnât personal, so we can move on and have fried rice.â
âOh my God,â Malcolm muttered. âHolden, please.â
âIâm not having fried rice,â Adam said.
âYou can have raw bamboo while the normal people have fried rice. But as of right now, my boyfriend thinks that his BFFâs boyfriend and my own BFF has it out for him, and itâs cramping my double-dating style, so please.â
Adam blinked slowly. âBFF?â
âAdam.â Holden pointed at a grimacing Malcolm with his thumb. âNow, please.â
Adam sighed heavily, but he turned to Malcolm. âWhatever I said or did, it was not personal. Iâve been told that I can be needlessly antagonistic. And unapproachable.â
Olive didnât get to see Malcolmâs reaction. Because she was busy studying Adam and the slight curl on his lips, the one that became an almost smile when he looked at Olive and met her eyes. For a second, the brief second she held his gaze before he looked away, it was just the two of them. And this sort-of-past they shared, their stupid inside jokes, the way theyâd teased each other in the late-summer sunlight.
âPerfect.â Holden clapped his hands, intrusively loud. âEgg rolls for appetizer, yes?â
It was a good idea, this dinner. This night, this table, this moment. Sitting next to Adam, smelling the petrichor, watching the dark splotches on the gray cotton of his Henley from the storm that had started just as theyâd slipped inside the restaurant. They would have to talk, later, have a serious conversation about Tom and many other things. But for now it was the way it had always been between Adam and her: like slipping into a favorite dress, one sheâd thought lost inside her closet, and finding that it fit as comfortably as it used to.
âI want egg rolls.â She glanced at Adam. His hair was starting to get long again, so she did what felt natural: reached out and flattened his cowlick. âIâm going to take a wild guess and assume that you hate egg rolls, just like everything else thatâs good in the world.â
He mouthed smart-ass right as the waiter brought their waters and set the menus on the table. Three menus, to be precise. Holden and Malcolm each took one, and Olive and Adam exchanged a loaded, amused look and grabbed the remaining one to share. It worked perfectly: he angled it so that the veggie section was on his side and all manner of fried entrées were on hers. It was serendipitous enough that she let out a laugh.
Adam tapped his index finger on the drink section. âLook at this abomination,â he murmured. His lips were close to her earâa chuff of hot air, intimate and pleasant in the blasting AC.
She grinned. âNo way.â
âAppalling.â
âAmazing, you mean.â
âI do not.â
âThis is my new favorite restaurant.â
âYou havenât even tried it yet.â
âIt will be spectacular.â
âIt will be horrificââ
A throat cleared, reminding them that they were not alone. Malcolm and Holden were both staringâMalcolm with a shrewd, suspicious expression, and Holden with a knowing smile. âWhatâs all that about?â
âOh.â Oliveâs cheeks warmed a little. âNothing. They just have pumpkin spice bubble tea.â
Malcolm pretended to gag. âUgh, Ol. Gross.â
âShut up.â
âIt sounds great.â Holden smiled and leaned into Malcolm. âWe should get one to split.â
âExcuse me?â
Olive tried not to laugh at Malcolmâs horrified expression. âDonât get Malcolm started on pumpkin spice,â she told Holden in an exaggerated whisper.
âOh, shit.â Holden clutched his chest in mock terror.
âThis is a serious matter.â Malcolm let his menu fall on the table. âPumpkin spice is Satanâs dandruff, harbinger of the apocalypse, and it tastes like assânot in the good way.â Next to Olive Adam nodded slowly, highly impressed with Malcolmâs rant. âOne pumpkin spice latte contains the same amount of sugar youâd find in fifty Skittlesâand no pumpkin whatsoever. Look it up.â
Adam stared at Malcolm with something very similar to admiration. Holden met Oliveâs eyes and told her conspiratorially, âOur boyfriends have so much in common.â
âThey do. They think hating entire harmless families of food is a personality trait.â
âPumpkin spice is not harmless. Itâs a radioactive, overpowering sugar bomb that worms its way into every sort of product and is single-handedly responsible for the extinction of the Caribbean monk seal. And youââhe pointed his finger at Holdenââare on thin ice.â
âWhatâwhy?â
âI canât date someone who doesnât respect my stance on pumpkin spice.â
âTo be fair itâs not a very respectable stanceââ Holden noticed Malcolmâs glare and lifted his hands defensively. âI had no idea, babe.â
âYou should have.â
Adam clucked his tongue, amused. âYes, Holden. Do better.â He leaned back in his seat, and his shoulder brushed against Oliveâs. Holden gave him the finger.
âAdam knows and respects Oliveâs stance on hamburgers, and theyâre not evenââ Whatever Malcolm had been about to say, he had the sense to stop himself. âWell, if Adam knows, you should know about the pumpkin spice.â
âWasnât Adam a dick until, like, twelve seconds ago?â
âHow the turntables,â Adam murmured. Olive reached out to pinch him on the side, but he stopped her with a hand around her wrist.
Evil, she mouthed at him. He just smiled, evilly, studying Malcolm and Holden a little too gleefully.
âCome on. Itâs not even comparable,â Holden was saying. âOlive and Adam have been together for years. We met less than a week ago.â
âThey have not,â Malcolm corrected him, wagging a finger. Adamâs hand was still curled around her wrist. âThey started dating, like, a month before we did.â
âNo,â Holden insisted. âAdam was into her for ages. He probably secretly studied her eating habits and compiled seventeen databases and built machine-learning algorithms to predict her culinary preferencesââ
Olive burst into laughter. âHe did not.â She took a sip of water, still smiling. âWe only just started hanging out. At the beginning of the fall semester.â
âYes, but you knew each other from earlier.â Holden was frowning. âYou two met the year before you started your Ph.D. here, when you came for your interview, and heâs been pining after you ever since.â
Olive shook her head and laughed, turning to Adam to share her amusement. Except that Adam was staring at her already, and he did not look amused. He looked . . . something else. Worried maybe, or apologetic, or resigned. Panicky? And just like that, the restaurant was silent. The pitter-patter of rain on the windows, peopleâs chatter, the clinking of silverwareâit all receded; the floor tilted, shook a little, and the AC was just this side of too cold. At some point, Adamâs fingers had let go of her wrist.
Olive thought back to the bathroom incident. To burning eyes and wet cheeks, the smell of reagent and clean, male skin. The blur of a large, dark figure standing in front of her with his deep, reassuring, amused voice. The panic of being twenty-three and alone and having no idea what she should be doing, where she should be going, what the right choice was.
Is mine a good enough reason to go to grad school?
Itâs the best one.
All of a sudden, things had seemed simple enough.
It had been Adam, after all. Olive had been right.
What she hadnât been right about was whether he remembered her.
âYes,â she said. She wasnât smiling anymore. Adam was still holding her gaze. âI guess he has.â