The Love Hypothesis: Chapter 11
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âDid you . . . did you hear that?â she blurted out.
Malcolm hurried to clear the table of his stuff, muttering tightly, âI was just about to go.â
Olive barely noticed, busy watching Adam slide the chair back to sit across from her.
Shit.
âYes,â he said, bland and even, and Olive felt like she was about to disintegrate into a million tiny pieces, here, in this exact spot. She wanted him to take it back. Wanted him to say âNo, heard what?â She wanted to go back to earlier this morning and rewind it all, this horrible mess of a day. Not look at the texts on her phone, not let Anh walk in on her mooning over her fake boyfriend, not pour her heart out to Malcolm in the worst possible place.
Adam couldnât know. He simply couldnât. Heâd think that Olive had kissed him on purpose, that sheâd masterminded this whole fiasco, that sheâd manipulated him into this situation. Heâd feel compelled to break up with her well before he could reap any benefits from their arrangement. And he would hate her.
The prospect was terrifying, so she said the one thing she could think of.
âIt wasnât about you.â
The lie rolled off her tongue like a mudslide: unpremeditated, quick, and bound to leave a huge mess behind.
âI know.â He nodded, and . . . he didnât even look surprised. It was as though it had never occurred to him that Olive might have been interested in him. It made her want to cryâa frequent state on this stupid morningâbut instead of doing that, she just vomited out another lie.
âI just . . . I have a thing. For a guy.â
He nodded again, this time slowly. His eyes darkened, and the corner of his jaw twitched, just for a moment. She blinked, and his expression was blank again. âYeah. I gathered that.â
âThis guy, heâs . . .â She swallowed. What was he? Quick, Olive, quick. An immunologist? Icelandic? A giraffe? What was he?
âYou donât have to explain if you donât want.â Adamâs voice seemed slightly offbeat, but also comforting. Tired. Olive realized that she was wringing her hands, and instead of stopping she simply hid them under the table.
âI . . . Itâs just that . . .â
âItâs okay.â He offered her a reassuring smile, and Oliveâshe couldnât possibly look at him. Not a second longer. She averted her eyes, desperately wishing she had something to say. Something to fix this. Right outside the caféâs window, a group of undergrads were huddling together in front of a laptop, laughing at something playing on the screen. A gust of wind scattered a stack of notes, and a boy scrambled to retrieve them. In the distance, Dr. Rodrigues was walking in the direction of Starbucks.
âThis . . . our arrangement.â Adamâs voice pulled her back inside. To the lies and the table between them; to the gentle, soft way he was talking to her. Kind, heâd been so kind.
Adam. I used to think the worst of you, and now . . .
âItâs supposed to help both of us. If it stops doing so . . .â
âNo.â Olive shook her head. âNo. I . . .â She forced her face into a smile. âItâs complicated.â
âI see.â
She opened her mouth to say that no, he couldnât possibly see. He couldnât possibly see anything, because Olive had just made all of this up. This clusterfuck of a situation. âI donâtââ She wet her lips. âThere is no need to stop our arrangement early, because I canât tell him that I like him. Because Iââ
âDude.â A hand clapped on Adamâs shoulder. âSince when are you not in your offiâ Oh. I see.â Dr. Rodriguesâs gaze slid from Adam to Olive and settled on her. For a second, he just stood by the table and took her in, surprised to find her there. Then his mouth widened into a slow grin. âHey, Olive.â
During Oliveâs first year of grad school, Dr. Rodrigues had been on her preassigned graduate advisory committeeâan admittedly odd choice, given his relative lack of relevance to her research. And yet, Olive had mostly pleasant memories of her interactions with him. When sheâd stammered her way through her committee meetings, heâd always been the first to smile at her, and once heâd even complimented her Star Wars T-shirtâand then proceeded to hum the Darth Vader theme under his breath every time Dr. Moss would start one of her rants against Oliveâs methods.
âHey, Dr. Rodrigues.â She was positive that her smile was not nearly as convincing as it should have been. âHow are you?â
He waved a hand. âPssh. Please, call me Holden. Youâre not my student anymore.â He patted Adam on the back with relish. âAnd you have the very dubious pleasure of dating my oldest, most socially impaired friend.â
It was all Olive could do not to let her jaw drop. They were friends? Charming, devil-may-care Holden Rodrigues and surly, taciturn Adam Carlsen were old friends? Was this something she was supposed to know? Adamâs girlfriend would have known, right?
Dr. RodriguesâHolden? God, Holden. She was never going to get used to the fact that professors were real people and had first namesâturned to Adam, who appeared untroubled by having been decreed socially impaired.
He asked, âYouâre leaving for Boston tonight, right?â and his speech pattern changed a littleâpitched lower and faster, more casual. Comfortable. They really were old friends.
âYeah. Can you still give Tom and me a ride to the airport?â
âDepends.â
âOn what?â
âIs Tom going to be gagged and tied up in the trunk?â
Adam sighed. âHolden.â
âIâll allow him in the back seat, but if he doesnât keep his mouth shut, Iâll ditch him on the highway.â
âFine. Iâll let him know.â
Holden seemed satisfied. âAnyway, I didnât mean to interrupt.â He patted Adamâs shoulder once more, but he was looking at Olive.
âItâs okay.â
âReally? Well, then.â His smile broadened and he pulled up a chair from a nearby table. Adam closed his eyes, resigned.
âSo, what are we talking about?â
Why, I was just in the middle of lying my ass off, thank you for asking. âAh . . . nothing much. How do you two . . .â She looked between them, clearing her throat. âSorry, I forgot how you and Adam know each other.â
A thudâHolden kicking Adam under the table. âYou little shit. You didnât tell her about our decades-deep history?â
âJust trying to forget.â
âYou wish.â Holden turned to grin at her. âWe grew up together.â
She frowned at Adam. âI thought you grew up in Europe?â
Holden waved his hand. âHe grew up all over the place. And so did I, since our parents worked together. Diplomatsâthe worst kind of people. But then our families settled in DC.â He leaned forward. âGuess who went to high school, college, and grad school together.â
Oliveâs eyes widened, and Holden noticed, at least judging by how he kicked Adam again.
âYou really havenât told her shit. I see youâre still going for brooding and mysterious.â He rolled his eyes fondly and looked at me again. âDid Adam tell you that he almost didnât graduate high school? He got suspended for punching a guy who insisted that the Large Hadron Collider would destroy the planet.â
âInteresting how youâre not mentioning that you got suspended alongside me for doing the exact same thing.â
Holden ignored him. âMy parents were out of the country on some kind of assignment and briefly forgot that I existed, so we spent the week at my place playing Final Fantasyâit was glorious. What about when Adam applied to law school? He must have told you about that.â
âI never technically applied to law school.â
âLies. All lies. Did he at least tell you that he was my prom date? It was phenomenal.â
Olive looked at Adam, expecting him to deny that, too. But Adam just half smiled, met Holdenâs eyes, and said, âIt was quite phenomenal.â
âPicture this, Olive. Early two thousands. Preppy, ridiculously expensive all-male DC school. Two gay students in grade twelve. Well, two of us that were out, anyway. Richie Muller and I date for the entirety of senior yearâand then he dumps me three days before prom for some guy heâd been having a thing with for months.â
âHe was a prick,â Adam muttered.
âI have three choices. Not go to the dance and mope at home. Go alone and mope at school. Or, have my best friendâwho was planning on staying home and moping over gamma-aminobutyric acidsâcome as my date. Guess which?â
Olive gasped. âHow did you convince him?â
âThatâs the thing, I didnât. When I told him about what Richie did, he offered!â
âDonât get used to it,â Adam mumbled.
âCan you believe it, Olive?â
That Adam would pretend to be in a relationship with someone to get them out of a miserable situation? âNope.â
âWe held hands. We slow-danced. We made Richie spit out his punch and regret every single one of his wretched choices. Then we went home and played even more Final Fantasy. It was the shit.â
âIt was surprisingly fun,â Adam conceded, almost reluctantly.
Olive looked at him, and a realization dawned on her: Holden was Adamâs Anh. His person. It was obvious that Adam and Tom were very close, too, but the relationship Adam had with Holden was something else, and . . . and Olive had no idea what to do with this piece of information.
Maybe she should tell Malcolm. Heâd either have a field day or go completely berserk.
âWell,â Holden said, standing up. âThis was fantastic. Iâll go get coffee, but we should hang out soon, the three of us. I canât remember the last time I had the pleasure of embarrassing Adam in front of a girlfriend. For now, though, heâs all yours.â He followed the word âyoursâ with a smirk that had Olive blushing.
Adam rolled his eyes when Holden left for the coffee counter. Fascinated, Olive followed him with her gaze for several moments. âUm, that was . . . ?â
âHolden for you.â Adam seemed barely annoyed.
She nodded, still a little dazed. âI canât believe Iâm not your first.â
âMy first?â
âYour first fake date.â
âRight. I guess prom qualifies.â He seemed to mull it over. âHolden has had some . . . bad luck with relationships. Undeserved bad luck.â
It warmed her chest, the protective concern in his tone. Made her wonder if he was even aware of it.
âDid he and Tom ever . . . ?â
He shook his head. âHolden would be outraged if he knew you asked.â
âWhy doesnât he want to drive Tom to the airport, then?â
Adam shrugged. âHolden has always had a very deep, very irrational dislike of Tom, ever since grad school.â
âOh. Why?â
âNot sure. Not sure Holden knows, either. Tom says heâs jealous. I think itâs just a personality thing.â
Olive fell silent, absorbing the information. âYou didnât tell Holden about us, either. That itâs not real.â
âNo.â
âWhy?â
Adam looked away. âI donât know.â His jaw tensed. âI think I just didnât . . .â His voice trailed off, and he shook his head before giving her a smile, small and a little forced. âHe speaks very highly of you, you know?â
âHolden? Of me?â
âOf your work. And your research.â
âOh.â She had no idea what to say to that. When did you talk about me? And why? âOh,â she repeated uselessly.
She wasnât sure why now, in this very moment, but the possible ramifications of their arrangement on Adamâs life hit her in full for the first time. They had agreed to fake-date because they both had something to gain from it, but it occurred to her that Adam also had significantly more to lose. Out of all the people she loved, Olive was only lying to one, Anh, and that was absolutely unavoidable. She could not care less about other studentsâ opinions. Adam, though . . . he was lying on a daily basis to his colleagues and his friends. His grads interacted with him every day believing that he was dating one of their peers. Did they think him lecherous? Had his relationship with Olive changed their perception of him? And what about other faculty members in the department, or in adjacent programs? Just because dating a grad student was allowed, it didnât mean that it wasnât frowned upon. And what if Adam metâor had already metâsomeone he actually liked? When theyâd struck their deal, heâd said he wasnât going to date, but that had been weeks ago. Olive herself had been convinced that sheâd never be interested in dating anyone at the timeâand didnât that make her want to laugh now, in a remarkably unfunny way? Not to mention that she alone was benefitting from their arrangement. Anh and Jeremy had bought her lie, but Adamâs research funds were still frozen.
And yet, he was still helping her despite all of this. And Olive was repaying his kindness by getting ideas and developing feelings that were sure to make him feel uncomfortable.
âDo you want to get coffee?â
Olive looked up from her hands. âNo.â She cleared her throat against the burning sensation lodged behind her sternum. The idea of coffee made her nauseous. âI think I need to go back to the lab.â
She bent down to retrieve her backpack, meaning to stand and leave immediately, but halfway through, a thought swept over her, and she found herself staring at him. He was sitting across from her with a concerned expression, a slight frown creasing his brow.
She attempted a smile. âWe are friends, right?â
His frown deepened. âFriends?â
âYes. You and I.â
He studied for a long moment. Something new passed through his face, stark and a little sad. Too fleeting to interpret. âYes, Olive.â
She nodded, unsure as to whether she should be feeling relieved. This was not how sheâd thought today would go, and there was a strange pressure behind her eyelids, which had her sliding her arms through the straps of her backpack that much quicker. She waved him goodbye with a tremulous smile, and sheâd have already been out of this damn Starbucks, if he hadnât said with that voice of his: âOlive.â
She paused right in front of his chair and looked down at him. It was so odd, to be the taller one for once.
âThis might be inappropriate, but . . .â His jaw shifted, and he closed his eyes for a second. As if to collect his thoughts. âOlive. You are really . . . You are extraordinary, and I cannot imagine that if you told Jeremy how you feel he wouldnât . . .â He trailed off and then nodded. A punctuation of sorts, as his words and the way heâd said them brought her that much closer to tears.
He thought it was Jeremy. Adam thought Olive had been in love with Jeremy when theyâd begun their arrangementâhe thought she was still in love with him. Because sheâd just told a half-assed lie that she was too afraid to take back andâ
It was going to happen. She was going to cry, and what she wanted most in the world was to not do it in front of Adam.
âIâll see you next week, okay?â She didnât wait for his response and walked briskly toward the exit, her shoulder bumping into someone she should have apologized to. Once she was outside, she took a deep breath and marched to the biology building, trying to empty her mind, forcing herself to think about the section she was slated to TA later today, the fellowship application sheâd promised Dr. Aslan sheâd send by tomorrow, the fact that Anhâs sister would be in town next weekend and had made plans to cook Vietnamese food for everyone.
A chilly wind weaved through the leaves of the campus trees, pushing Oliveâs sweater against her body. She hugged herself and didnât look back to the café. Fall had finally begun.