The Love Hypothesis: Chapter 8
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Number thirty-sevenâsalt-and-vinegar potato chipsâwas sold out. It was frankly inexplicable: Olive had come in at 8:00 p.m., and there had been at least one bag left in the break roomâs vending machine. She distinctly remembered patting the back pocket of her jeans for quarters, and the feeling of triumph at finding exactly four. She recalled looking forward to that moment, approximately two hours later, by which time she estimated that sheâd have completed exactly a third of her work and would thus be able to reward herself with the indisputable best among the snacks that the fourth floor had to offer. Except that the moment had come, and there were no chips left. Which was a problem, because Olive had already inserted her precious quarters inside the coin slot, and she was very hungry.
She selected number twenty-four (Twix)âwhich was okay, though not her favorite by a long shotâand listened to its dull, disappointing thud as it fell to the bottom shelf. Then she bent to pick it up, staring wistfully at the way the gold wrapper shined in her palm.
âI wish you were salt-and-vinegar chips,â she whispered at it, a trace of resentment in her voice.
âHere.â
âAaah!â She startled and instantly turned around, hands in front of her body and ready to defendâpossibly even to attack. But the only person in the break room was Adam, sitting on one of the small couches in the middle, looking at her with a bland, slightly amused expression.
She relaxed her pose and clutched her hands to her chest, willing her racing heartbeat to slow down. âWhen did you get here?!â
âFive minutes ago?â He regarded her calmly. âI was here when you came in.â
âWhy didnât you say something?â
He tilted his head. âI could ask the same.â
She covered her mouth with her hand, trying to recover from the scare. âI didnât see you. Why are you sitting in the dark like a creep?â
âLightâs broken. As usual.â Adam lifted his drinkâa bottle of Coke that hilariously read âSeraphinaââand Olive remembered Jess, one of his grads, complaining about how strict Adam was about bringing food and drinks into his lab. He grabbed something from the cushion and held it out to Olive. âHere. You can have the rest of the chips.â
Olive narrowed her eyes. âYou.â
âMe?â
âYou stole my chips.â
His mouth curved. âSorry. You can have whatâs left.â He peeked into the bag. âI didnât have many, I donât think.â
She hesitated and then made her way to the couch. She distrustfully accepted the small bag and took a seat next to him. âThanks, I guess.â
He nodded, taking a sip of his drink. She tried not to stare at his throat as he tipped his head back, averting her eyes to her knees.
âShould you be having caffeine atââOlive glanced at the clockââten twenty-seven p.m.?â Come to think of it, he shouldnât be having caffeine at all, given his baseline shiny personality. And yet the two of them got coffee together every Wednesday. Olive was nothing but an enabler.
âI doubt Iâll be sleeping much, anyway.â
âWhy?â
âI need to run a set of last-minute analyses for a grant due on Sunday night.â
âOh.â She leaned back, finding a more comfortable position. âI thought you had minions for that.â
âAs it turns out, asking your grads to pull an all-nighter for you is frowned upon by HR.â
âWhat a travesty.â
âTruly. What about you?â
âTomâs report.â She sighed. âIâm supposed to send it to him tomorrow and thereâs a section that I just donât . . .â She sighed again. âIâm rerunning a few analyses, just to make sure that everything is perfect, but the equipment Iâm working with is not exactly . . . ugh.â
âHave you told Aysegul?â
Aysegul, heâd said. Naturally. Because Adam was a colleague of Dr. Aslan, not her grad, and it made sense that heâd think of her as Aysegul. It wasnât the first time heâd called her that; it wasnât even the first time Olive had noticed. It was just hard to reconcile, when they were sitting alone and talking quietly, that Adam was faculty and Olive was very much not. Worlds apart, really.
âI did, but thereâs no money to get anything better. Sheâs a great mentor, but . . . last year her husband got sick and she decided to retire early, and sometimes it feels like sheâs stopped caring.â Olive rubbed her temple. She could feel a headache coming up and had a long night ahead of her. âAre you going to tell her I told you that?â
âOf course.â
She groaned. âDonât.â
âMight also tell her about the kisses youâve been extorting, and the fake-dating scheme you roped me into, and above all about the sunscreenââ
âOh God.â Olive hid her face in her knees, arms coming up to wrap around her head. âGod. The sunscreen.â
âYeah.â His voice sounded muffled from down here. âYeah, that was . . .â
âAwkward?â she offered, sitting back straight with a grimace. Adam was looking elsewhere. She was probably imagining it, the way he was flushing.
He cleared his throat. âAmong other things.â
âYep.â It had been other things, too. A lot of things that she was not going to mention, because her other things were sure to not be his other things. His other things were probably âterribleâ and âharrowingâ and âinvasive.â While hers . . .
âIs the sunscreen going in the Title IX complaint?â
His mouth twitched. âRight on the first page. Nonconsensual sunblock application.â
âOh, come on. I saved you from basal cell carcinoma.â
âGroped under SPF pretense.â
She swatted him with her Twix, and he ducked a bit to avoid her, amused. âHey, you want half of this? Since I fully plan to eat whatâs left of your chips.â
âNah.â
âYou sure?â
âCanât stand chocolate.â
Olive stared at him, shaking her head in disbelief. âYou would, wouldnât you? Hate everything that is delicious and lovely and comforting.â
âChocolateâs disgusting.â
âYou just want to live in your dark, bitter world made of black coffee and plain bagels with plain cream cheese. And occasionally salt-and-vinegar chips.â
âThey are clearly your favorite chipsââ
âNot the point.â
ââand I am flattered that youâve memorized my orders.â
âIt does help that theyâre always the same.â
âAt least Iâve never ordered something called a unicorn Frappuccino.â
âThat was so good. It tasted like the rainbow.â
âLike sugar and food coloring?â
âMy two favorite things in the universe. Thank you for buying it for me, by the way.â It had made for a nice fake-dating Wednesday treat this week, even though Olive had been so busy with Tomâs report that she hadnât been able to exchange more than a couple of words with Adam. Which, she had to admit, had been a little disappointing.
âWhereâs Tom by the way, while you and I slave our Friday night away?â
âOut. On a date, I think.â
âOn a date? Does his girlfriend live here?â
âTom has lots of girlfriends. In lots of places.â
âBut are any of them fake?â She beamed at him, and could tell that he was tempted to smile back. âWould you like half a dollar, then? For the chips?â
âKeep it.â
âGreat. Because itâs about a third of my monthly salary.â
She actually managed to make him laugh, andâit didnât just transform his face, it changed the entire space they were inhabiting. Olive had to convince her lungs not to stop working, to keep taking in oxygen, and her eyes not to get lost in the little lines at the corners of his eyes, the dimples in the center of his cheeks. âGlad to hear that grad studentsâ stipends have not increased since I was one.â
âDid you use to live on instant ramen and bananas during your Ph.D., too?â
âI donât like bananas, but I remember having lots of apples.â
âApples are expensive, you fiscally irresponsible splurger.â She tilted her head and wondered if it was okay to ask the one thing sheâd been dying to know. She told herself that it was probably inappropriateâand then went for it anyway. âHow old are you?â
âThirty-four.â
âOh. Wow.â Sheâd thought younger. Or older, maybe. Sheâd thought he existed in an ageless dimension. It was so weird to hear a number. To have a year of birth, almost a whole decade before hers. âIâm twenty-six.â Olive wasnât sure why she offered up the information, since he hadnât asked. âItâs odd to think that you used to be a student, too.â
âIs it?â
âYep. Were you like this as an undergrad, too?â
âLike this?â
âYou know.â She batted her eyes at him. âAntagonistic and unapproachable.â
He glared, but she was starting to not take that too seriously. âI might have been worse, actually.â
âI bet.â There was a brief, comfortable silence as she sat back and began to tackle her bag of chips. It was all sheâd ever wanted from a vending machine snack. âSo does it get better?â
âWhat?â
âThis.â She gestured inchoately around herself. âAcademia. Does it get better, after grad school? Once you have tenure?â
âNo. God, no.â He looked so horrified by the assumption, she had to laugh.
âWhy do you stick around, then?â
âUnclear.â There was a flash of something in his eyes that Olive couldnât quite interpret, butânothing surprising about that. There was a lot about Adam Carlsen she didnât know. He was an ass, but with unexpected depths. âThereâs an element of sunk-cost fallacy, probablyâhard to step away, when youâve invested so much time and energy. But the science makes it worth it. When it works, anyway.â
She hummed, considering his words, and remembered The Guy in the bathroom. Heâd said that academia was a lot of bucks for little bang, and that one needed a good reason to stick around. Olive wondered where he was now. If heâd managed to graduate. If he knew that heâd helped someone make one of the hardest decisions of their life. If he had any idea that there was a girl, somewhere in the world, who thought about their random encounter surprisingly often. Doubtful.
âI know grad school is supposed to be miserable for everyone, but itâs depressing to see tenured faculty here on a Friday night, instead of, I donât know, watching Netflix in bed, or getting dinner with their girlfriendââ
âI thought you were my girlfriend.â
Olive smiled up at him. âNot quite.â But, since weâre on the topic: why exactly donât you have one? Because itâs getting harder and harder for me to figure that one out. Except that maybe you just donât want one. Maybe you just want to be on your own, like everything about your behavior suggests, and here I am, annoying the shit out of you. I should just pocket my chips and my candy and go back to my stupid protein samples, but for some reason you are so comfortable to be around. And I am drawn to you, even though I donât know why.
âDo you plan to stay in academia?â he asked. âAfter you graduate.â
âYes. Maybe. No.â
He smiled, and Olive laughed.
âUndecided.â
âRight.â
âItâs just . . . there are things that I love about it. Being in the lab, doing research. Coming up with study ideas, feeling that Iâm doing something meaningful. But if I go the academic route, then Iâll also need to do a lot of other things that I just . . .â She shook her head.
âOther things?â
âYeah. The PR stuff, mostly. Write grants and convince people to fund my research. Network, which is a special kind of hell. Public speaking, or even one-on-one situations where I have to impress people. Thatâs the worst, actually. I hate it so muchâmy head explodes and I freeze and everyone is looking at me ready to judge me and my tongue paralyzes and I start wishing that I was dead and then that the world was dead andââ She noticed his smile and gave him a rueful look. âYou get the gist.â
âThere are things you can do about that, if you want. It just takes practice. Making sure your thoughts are organized. Stuff like that.â
âI know. And I try to do thatâI did it before my meeting with Tom. And I still stammered like an idiot when he asked me a simple question.â And then you helped me, ordered my thoughts, and saved my ass, without even meaning to. âI donât know. Maybe my brain is broken.â
He shook his head. âYou did great during that meeting with Tom, especially considering that you were forced to have your fake boyfriend sit next to you.â She didnât point out that his presence had actually made things better. âTom certainly seemed impressed, which is no small feat. And if anyone screwed up, it was definitely him. Iâm sorry he did that, by the way.â
âDid what?â
âForce you to talk about your personal life.â
âOh.â Olive looked away, toward the blue glow of the vending machine. âItâs okay. Itâs been a while.â She was surprised to hear herself continue. To feel herself wanting to continue. âSince high school, really.â
âThatâs . . . young.â There was something about his tone, maybe the evenness, maybe the lack of overt sympathy, that she found reassuring.
âI was fifteen. One day my mom and I were there, just . . . I donât even know. Kayaking. Thinking about getting a cat. Arguing over the way Iâd pile stuff on top of the trash can when it was overflowing and I didnât want to take it out. And next thing I knew she had her diagnosis, and three weeks later sheâd alreadyââ She couldnât say it. Her lips, her vocal folds, her heart, they just wouldnât form the words. So she swallowed them. âThe child welfare system couldnât figure out where to send me until I became of age.â
âYour dad?â
She shook her head. âNever in the picture. Heâs an asshole, according to my mom.â She laughed softly. âThe never-takes-out-the-trash gene clearly came from his side of the family. And my grandparents had died when I was a kid, because apparently thatâs what people around me do.â She tried to say it jokingly, she really tried. To not sound bitter. She thought she even succeeded. âI was just . . . alone.â
âWhat did you do?â
âFoster home until sixteen, then I emancipated.â She shrugged, hoping to brush off the memory. âIf only theyâd caught it earlier, even just by a few monthsâmaybe sheâd be here. Maybe surgery and chemo would have actually done something. And I . . . I was always good at science stuff, so I thought that the least I could do was . . .â
Adam dug into his pockets for a few moments and held out a crumpled paper napkin. Olive stared at it, confused, until she realized that her cheeks had somehow grown wet.
Oh.
âAdam, did you just offer me a used tissue?â
âI . . . maybe.â He pressed his lips together. âI panicked.â
She chuckled wetly, accepting his gross tissue and using it to blow her nose. Theyâd kissed twice, after all. Why not share a bit of snot? âIâm sorry. Iâm usually not like this.â
âLike what?â
âWeepy. I . . . I shouldnât talk about this.â
âWhy?â
âBecause.â It was hard to explain, the mix of pain and affection that always resurfaced when she talked about her mother. It was the reason she almost never did it, and the reason she hated cancer so much. Not only had it robbed her of the person she loved the most, but it had also turned the happiest memories of her life into something bittersweet. âIt makes me weepy.â
He smiled. âOlive, you can talk about it. And you should let yourself be weepy.â
She had a sense that he really meant it. That she could have talked about her mom for however long she liked, and he would have listened intently to every second of it. She wasnât sure she was ready for it, though. So she shrugged, changing the topic. âAnyway, now here I am. Loving lab work and barely dealing with the restâabstracts, conferences, networking. Teaching. Rejected grants.â Olive gestured in Adamâs direction. âFailed dissertation proposals.â
âIs your lab mate still giving you a hard time?â
Olive waved her hand dismissively. âIâm not his favorite person, but itâs fine. Heâll get over it.â She bit into her lip. âIâm sorry about the other night. I was rude. You have every right to be mad.â
Adam shook his head. âItâs okay. I understand where you were coming from.â
âI do get what youâre saying. About not wanting to form a new generation of crappy millennial scientists.â
âI donât believe Iâve ever used the expression âcrappy millennial scientists.âââ
âBut FYI, I still think that you donât need to be that harsh when you give feedback. We get the gist of what youâre saying, even if you give criticism more nicely.â
He looked at her for a long time. Then he nodded, once. âNoted.â
âAre you going to be less harsh, then?â
âUnlikely.â
She sighed. âYou know, when I have no more friends and everyone hates me because of this fake-dating thing, Iâll be super lonely and you are going to have to hang out with me every day. Iâll annoy you all the time. Is it really worth being mean to every grad in the program?â
âAbsolutely.â
She sighed again, this time with a smile, and let the side of her head rest on his shoulder. It might have been a bit forward, but it felt naturalâmaybe because they seemed to have a knack for getting themselves in situations that required PDA of some sort, maybe because of everything theyâd been talking about, maybe because of the hour of the night. Adam . . . well, he didnât act as if he minded. He was just there, quiet, relaxed, warm and solid through the cotton of his black shirt under her temple. It felt like a long time before he broke the silence.
âIâm not sorry for asking Greg to revise his proposal. But I am sorry that I created a situation that led him to take it out on you. That as long as this continues, it might happen again.â
âWell, I am sorry about the texts I sent,â she said again. âAnd youâre fine. Even if youâre antagonistic and unapproachable.â
âGood to hear.â
âI should go back to the lab.â She sat up, one hand coming to massage the base of her neck. âMy disastrous blotting is not going to fix itself.â
Adam blinked, and there was a gleam in his eyes, as if he hadnât thought sheâd leave so soon. As if heâd have liked for her to stay. âWhy disastrous?â
She groaned. âItâs just . . .â She reached for her phone and tapped on the home button, pulling up a picture of her last Western blot. âSee?â She pointed at the target protein. âThisâit shouldnât . . .â
He nodded, thoughtful. âYouâre sure the starting sample was good? And the gel?â
âYep, not runny, or dried out.â
âIt looks like the antibody might be the problem.â
She looked up at him. âYou think so?â
âYep. Iâd check the dilution and the buffer. If not that, it might also be a wonky secondary antibody. Come by my lab if it still doesnât work; you can borrow ours. Same for other pieces of equipment or supplies. If thereâs anything you need, just ask my lab manager.â
âOh, wow. Thank you.â She smiled. âNow Iâm actually a bit sorry that I canât have you on my dissertation committee. Perhaps rumors of your cruelty have been greatly exaggerated.â
His mouth twitched. âMaybe you just pull out the best in me?â
She grinned. âThen maybe I should stick around. Just, you know, to save the department from your terrible moods?â
He glanced at the picture of the failed Western blot in her hand. âWell, it doesnât look like youâre going to graduate anytime soon.â
She half laughed, half gasped. âOh my God. Did you justâ?â
âObjectivelyââ
âThis is the rudest, meanest thingââ She was laughing. Holding her stomach as she waved her finger at him.
ââbased on your blottingââ
ââthat anyone could ever say to a Ph.D. student. Ever.â
âI think I can find meaner things. If I really put myself to it.â
âWeâre done.â She wished she werenât smiling. Then maybe heâd take her seriously instead of just looking at her with that patient, amused expression. âSeriously. It was nice while it lasted.â She made to stand and leave indignantly, but he grabbed the sleeve of her shirt and gently tugged at it until she was sitting down again, next to him on the narrow couchâmaybe even a little closer than before. She continued glaring, but he regarded her blandly, clearly unperturbed.
âThereâs nothing bad about taking more than five years to graduate,â he offered in a conciliatory tone.
Olive huffed. âYou just want me to stay around forever. Until you have the biggest, fattest, strongest Title IX case to ever exist.â
âThat was my plan all along, in fact. The one and only reason I kissed you out of the blue.â
âOh, shut up.â She ducked her chin into her chest, biting into her lip and hoping he wouldnât notice her grinning like the idiot she was. âHey, can I ask you something?â
Adam looked at her expectantly, like he seemed to a lot lately, so she continued, her tone softer and quieter.
âWhy are you really doing this?â
âDoing what?â
âThe fake dating. I understand that you want to look like youâre not a flight risk, but . . . Why arenât you really dating someone? I mean, youâre not that bad.â
âHigh praise.â
âNo, come on, what I meant was . . . Based on your fake-dating behavior, Iâm sure that a lot of women . . . well, some women would love to real-date you.â She bit into her lip again, playing with the hole that was opening up on the knee of her jeans. âWeâre friends. We werenât when we started, but we are now. You can tell me.â
âAre we?â
She nodded. Yes. Yes, we are. Come on. âWell, you did just break one of the sacred tenets of academic friendships by mentioning my graduation timeline. But Iâll forgive you if you tell me if this is really better for you than . . . you know, getting a real girlfriend.â
âIt is.â
âReally?â
âYes.â He seemed honest. He was honest. Adam was not a liar; Olive would bet her life on it.
âWhy, though? Do you enjoy the sunscreen-mediated fondling? And the opportunity to donate hundreds of your dollars to the campus Starbucks?â
He smiled faintly. And then he wasnât smiling anymore. Not looking at her, either, but somewhere in the direction of the crumpled plastic wrapper that sheâd tossed on the table a few minutes go.
He swallowed. She could see his jaw work.
âOlive.â He took a deep breath. âYou should know thatââ
âOh my God!â
They both startled, Olive considerably more so than Adam, and turned toward the entrance. Jeremy stood there, one hand dramatically clutching his sternum. âYou guys scared the shit out of me. What are you doing sitting in the dark?â
What are you doing here? Olive thought ungraciously. âJust chatting,â she said. Though it didnât seem like a good descriptor of what was going on. And yet, she couldnât put her finger on why.
âYou scared me,â Jeremy repeated once more. âAre you working on your report, Ol?â
âYeah.â She stole a quick glance at Adam, who was motionless and expressionless next to her. âJust taking a quick break. I was about to go back, actually.â
âOh, cool. Me too.â Jeremy smiled, pointing in the direction of his lab. âI need to go isolate a bunch of virgin fruit flies. Before theyâre not virgins anymore, you know?â He wiggled his eyebrows, and Olive had to force out a small, unconvincing laugh. She usually enjoyed his sense of humor. Usually. Now she just wished . . . She wasnât sure what she wished. âYou coming with, Ol?â
No, Iâm fine right here, actually. âSure.â Reluctantly, she stood. Adam did the same, gathering their wrappers and his empty bottle and sorting them in the recycling bins.
âHave a good night, Dr. Carlsen,â Jeremy said from the entrance. Adam just nodded at him, a touch curtly. The set of his eyes was yet again impossible to decipher.
I guess thatâs it, then, she thought. Where the weight in her chest had come from, she had no clue. She was probably just tired. Had eaten too much, or not enough.
âSee you, Adam. Right?â she murmured before he could head for the entrance and leave the room. Her voice was pitched low enough that Jeremy couldnât possibly have heard her. Maybe Adam hadnât, either. Except that he paused for a moment. And then, when he walked past her, she had the impression of knuckles brushing against the back of her hand.
âGood night, Olive.â