The Love Hypothesis: Epilogue
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Ten months later
âStand there. You were standing right there.â
âWas I?â
He was humoring her. A little. That deliciously put-upon expression had become Oliveâs favorite over the past year. âA bit closer to the water fountain. Perfect.â She took a step back to admire her handiwork and then winked at him as she took out her phone to snap a quick picture. She briefly considered swapping it for her current screensaverâa selfie of the two of them in Joshua Tree a few weeks earlier, Adam squinting in the sun and Olive pressing her lips to his cheekâbut then thought better of it.
Their summer had been full of hiking trips, and delicious ice cream, and late-night kisses on Adamâs balcony, laughing and sharing untold stories and looking up at the stars, so much brighter than the ones Olive had once climbed on a ladder to stick to the ceiling of her bedroom. She was going to start working at a cancer lab at Berkeley in less than a week, which would mean a busier, more stressful schedule and a bit of a commute. And yet, she couldnât wait.
âJust stand there,â she ordered. âLook antagonistic and unapproachable. And say âpumpkin spice.âââ
He rolled his eyes. âWhatâs your plan if someone comes in?â
Olive glanced around the biology building. The hallway was silent and deserted, and the dim after-hours lights made Adamâs hair look almost blue. It was late, and summer, and the weekend to boot: no one was going to come in. Even if they did, Olive Smith and Adam Carlsen were old news by now. âLike who?â
âAnh might show up. To help you re-create the magic.â
âPretty sure sheâs out with Jeremy.â
âJeremy? The guy youâre in love with?â
Olive stuck her tongue out at him and glanced down at her phone. Happy. She was so happy, and she didnât even know why. Except that she did know.
âOkay. In one minute.â
âYou canât know the exact time.â Adamâs tone was patient and indulgent. âNot to the minute.â
âWrong. I ran a Western blot that night. I looked at my lab logs, and I reconstructed both the when and the where down to the error bars. I am a thorough scientist.â
âHm.â Adam folded his arms across his chest. âHow did that blotting turn out?â
âNot the point.â She grinned. âWhat were you doing here, by the way?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âA year ago. Why were you walking around the department at night?â
âI canât remember. Maybe I had a deadline. Or maybe I was going home.â He shrugged, and scanned the hallway until his eyes fell on the water fountain. âMaybe I was thirsty.â
âMaybe.â She took a step closer. âMaybe you were secretly hoping for a kiss.â
He gave her a long, amused look. âMaybe.â
She took another step, and another, and another. And then her alarm beeped, once, right as she came to stand in front of him. Another intrusion of his personal space. But this time, when she pushed up on her toes, when she wrapped her arms around his neck, Adamâs hands pulled her deeper into himself.
It had been one year. Exactly one year. And by now his body was so familiar to her, she knew the breadth of his shoulders, the scratch of his stubble, the scent of his skin, all by heart; she could feel the smile in his eyes.
Olive sank into him, let him support her weight, and then moved until her mouth was almost level with his ear. She pressed her lips against its shell, and whispered softly into his skin.
âMay I kiss you, Dr. Carlsen?â