The Love Hypothesis: Chapter 5
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âWait a minute.â Dr. Benton tilted his head. His smile was still in place, but his gaze became a little sharper, his focus on Olive less superficial. âDo you happen to be . . .â
Olive froze.
Her mind was never calm, or orderlyâmore like a garbled mess of thoughts, really. And yet, standing there in front of Tom Benton, the inside of her head went uncharacteristically quiet, and several considerations stacked themselves neatly into place.
The first was that she was comically luckless. The chances that the person she depended on to finish her beloved research project would be acquaintedâno, friends with the person she depended on to ensure her beloved Anhâs romantic happiness were laughably low. And yet. Then again, Oliveâs special brand of luck was no news, so she moved on to the next consideration.
She needed to admit who she was to Tom Benton. They were scheduled to meet at 3:00 p.m., and pretending not to recognize him now would mean the kiss of death to her plans to infiltrate herself into his lab. Academics had huge egos, after all.
Last consideration: if she phrased this right, she could probably avoid Dr. Benton hearing about the whole fake-dating mess. Adam hadnât mentioned it, which probably meant that he wasnât planning to. Olive just needed to follow his lead.
Yes. Excellent plan. She had this in the bag.
Olive smiled, held on to her pumpkin spice latte, and answered, âYes, Iâm Olive Smith, theââ
âGirlfriend Iâve heard so much about?â
Shit. Shit, shit, shit. She swallowed. âUm, actually Iââ
âHeard from whom?â Adam asked, frowning.
Dr. Benton shrugged. âEveryone.â
âEveryone,â Adam repeated. He was scowling now. âIn Boston?â
âYeah.â
âWhy are people at Harvard talking about my girlfriend?â
âBecause youâre you.â
âBecause Iâm me?â Adam looked perplexed.
âThere have been tears. Some hair-pulling. A few broken hearts. Donât worry, theyâll get over it.â
Adam rolled his eyes, and Dr. Benton returned his attention to Olive. He smiled at her, offering his hand. âItâs very nice to meet you. I had written off the whole girlfriend thing as rumors, but Iâm glad you . . . exist. Sorry, I didnât catch your nameâIâm terrible at names.â
âIâm Olive.â She shook his hand. He had a nice grip, not too tight and not too soft.
âWhich department do you teach, Olive?â
Oh, crap. âActually, I donât. Teach, that is.â
âOh, sorry. I didnât mean to assume.â He smiled, apologetic and self-effacing. There was a smooth charm to him. He was young to be a professor, though not as young as Adam. And he was tall, though not as tall as Adam. And he was handsome, though . . . yeah. Not as handsome as Adam.
âWhat do you do, then? Are you a research fellow?â
âUm, I actuallyââ
âSheâs a student,â Adam said.
Dr. Bentonâs eyes widened.
âA graduate student,â Adam clarified. There was a hint of warning in his tone, like he really wanted Dr. Benton to drop the subject.
Dr. Benton, naturally, did not. âYour graduate student?â
Adam frowned. âNo, of course sheâs not myââ
This was the perfect opening. âActually, Dr. Benton, I work with Dr. Aslan.â Maybe this meeting was still salvageable. âYou probably donât recognize my name, but weâve corresponded. Weâre supposed to meet today. Iâm the student whoâs working on the pancreatic cancer biomarkers. The one who asked to come work in your lab for a year.â
Dr. Bentonâs eyes widened even more, and he muttered something that sounded a lot like âWhat the hell?â Then his face stretched into a wide, openmouthed grin. âAdam, you absolute ass. You didnât even tell me.â
âI didnât know,â Adam muttered. His gaze was fixed on Olive.
âHow could you not know that your girlfriendââ
âI didnât tell Adam, because I didnât know you two were friends,â Olive interjected. And then she thought that maybe it wasnât quite believable. If Olive really were Adamâs girlfriend, heâd have told her about his friends. Since, in a shocking plot twist, he did appear to have at least one.
âThat is, I, um . . . never put two and two together, and didnât know that you were the Tom he always talked about.â There, better. Kind of. âIâm sorry, Dr. Benton. I didnât mean toââ
âTom,â he said, grin still in place. His shock seemed to be settling into pleasant surprise. âPlease, call me Tom.â His eyes darted between Adam and Olive for a few seconds. Then he said, âHey, are you free?â He pointed at the coffee shop. âWhy donât we go inside and chat about your project now? No point in waiting until this afternoon.â
She took a sip of her latte to temporize. Was she free? Technically, yes. She would have loved to run to the edge of campus and scream into the void until modern civilization collapsed, but that wasnât exactly a pressing matter. And she wanted to look as accommodating as possible to Dr. BentonâTom. Beggars and choosers and all that.
âIâm free.â
âGreat. You, Adam?â
Olive froze. And so did Adam, for about a second, before pointing out, âI donât think I should be present, if youâre about to interview herââ
âOh, itâs not an interview. Just an informal chat to see if Oliveâs and my research match. Youâll want to know if your girlfriend is moving to Boston for a year, right? Come on.â He motioned for them to follow him and then stepped inside the Starbucks.
Olive and Adam exchanged a silent look that somehow managed to speak volumes. It said, What the hell do we do? and How the hell would I know? and This is going to be weird, and No, itâs going to be plain bad. Then Adam sighed, put on a resigned face, and headed inside. Olive followed him, regretting her life choices.
âAslanâs retiring, huh?â Tom asked after theyâd found a secluded table in the back. Olive had no choice but to sit across from himâand on Adamâs left. Like a good âgirlfriend,â she supposed. Her âboyfriend,â in the meantime, was sullenly sipping his chamomile tea next to her. I should snap a picture, she reflected. Heâd make for an excellent viral meme.
âIn the next few years,â Olive confirmed. She loved her adviser, who had always been supportive and encouraging. Since the very beginning she had given Olive the freedom to develop her own research program, which was almost unheard of for Ph.D. students. Having a hands-off mentor was great when it came to pursuing her interests, but . . .
âIf Aslanâs retiring soon, sheâs not applying for grants anymoreâunderstandable, since she wonât be around long enough to see the projects throughâwhich means that your lab is not exactly flush with cash right now,â Tom summarized perfectly. âOkay, tell me about your project. Whatâs cool about it?â
âI . . . ,â Olive beganâshe scrambled to collect her thoughts. âSo, itâsââ Another pause. Longer this time, and more painfully awkward. âUm . . .â
This, precisely, was her problem. Olive knew that she was an excellent scientist, that she had the discipline and the critical-thinking skills to produce good work in the lab. Unfortunately succeeding in academia also required the ability to pitch oneâs work, sell it to strangers, present it in public, and . . . that was not something she enjoyed or excelled at. It made her feel panicky and judged, as though pinned to a microscope slide, and her ability to produce syntactically coherent sentences invariably leaked out of her brain.
Like right now. Olive felt her cheeks heat and her tongue tie andâ
âWhat kind of question is that?â Adam interjected.
When she glanced at him, he was scowling at Tom, who just shrugged.
âWhatâs cool about your project?â Adam repeated back.
âYeah. Cool. You know what I mean.â
âI donât think I do, and maybe neither does Olive.â
Tom huffed. âFine, what would you ask?â
Adam turned to Olive. His knee brushed her leg, warm and oddly reassuring through her jeans. âWhat issues does your project target? Why do you think itâs significant? What gaps in the literature does it fill? What techniques are you using? What challenges do you foresee?â
Tom huffed. âRight, sure. Consider all those long, boring questions asked, Olive.â
She glanced at Adam, finding that he was studying her with a calm, encouraging expression. The way heâd formulated the questions helped her reorganize her thoughts, and realizing that she had answers for each one melted most of her panic. It probably hadnât been intentional on Adamâs part, but heâd done her a solid.
Olive was reminded of that guy from the bathroom, from years ago. I have no idea if youâre good enough, heâd told her. What matters is whether your reason to be in academia is good enough. Heâd said that Oliveâs reason was the best one, and therefore, she could do this. She needed to do this.
âOkay,â she started again after a deep breath, gathering what sheâd rehearsed the previous night with Malcolm. âHereâs the deal. Pancreatic cancer is very aggressive and deadly. It has very poor prognosis, with only one out of four people alive a year after diagnosis.â Her voice, she thought, sounded less breathy and more self-assured. Good. âThe problem is that itâs so hard to detect, we are only able to diagnose it very late in the game. At that point, the cancer has already spread so widely, most treatments canât do much to counteract it. But if diagnosis were fasterââ
âPeople could get treatment sooner and have a higher chance of survival,â Tom said, nodding a bit impatiently. âYep, Iâm well aware. We already have some screening tools, though. Like imaging.â
She wasnât surprised he brought it up, since imaging was what Tomâs lab focused on. âYes, but thatâs expensive, time-consuming, and often not useful because of the pancreasâs position. But . . .â She took another deep breath. âI think I have found a set of biomarkers. Not from tissue biopsyâblood biomarkers. Noninvasive, easy to obtain. Cheap. In mice they can detect pancreatic cancer as early as stage one.â
She paused. Tom and Adam were both staring at her. Tom was clearly interested, and Adam looked . . . a little weird, to be honest. Impressed, maybe? Nah, impossible.
âOkay. This sounds promising. Whatâs the next step?â
âCollecting more data. Running more analyses with better equipment to prove that my set of biomarkers is worthy of a clinical trial. But for that I need a larger lab.â
âI see.â He nodded with a thoughtful expression and then leaned back in his chair. âWhy pancreatic cancer?â
âItâs one of the most lethal, and we know so little about howââ
âNo,â Tom interrupted. âMost third-year Ph.D. students are too busy infighting over the centrifuge to come up with their own line of research. There must be a reason youâre so motivated. Did someone close to you have cancer?â
Olive swallowed before reluctantly answering, âYes.â
âWho?â
âTom,â Adam said, a trace of warning in his voice. His knee was still against her thigh. Still warm. And yet, Olive felt her blood turn cold. She really, really didnât want to say it. And yet she couldnât ignore the question. She needed Tomâs help.
âMy mother.â
Okay. It was out there now. Sheâd said it, and she could go back to trying not to think about itâ
âDid she die?â
A beat. Olive hesitated and then nodded silently, not looking at either of the men at the table. She knew Tom wasnât trying to be meanâpeople were curious, after all. But it wasnât something Olive wanted to discuss. She barely ever talked about it, even with Anh and Malcolm, and she had carefully avoided writing about her experience in her grad school applications, even when everyone had told her it would give her a leg up.
She just . . . She couldnât. She just couldnât.
âHow old were youââ
âTom,â Adam interrupted, tone sharp. He set his tea down with more force than necessary. âStop harassing my girlfriend.â It was less of a warning and more of a threat.
âRight. Yes. Iâm an insensitive ass.â Tom smiled, apologetic.
Olive noticed that he was looking at her shoulder. When she followed his gaze, she realized that Adam had placed his arm on the back of her chair. He wasnât touching her, but there was something . . . protective about his position. He seemed to generate large amounts of heat, which was not at all unwelcome. It helped melt the yucky feeling the conversation with Tom had left behind.
âThen again, so is your boyfriend.â Tom winked at her. âOkay, Olive. Tell you what.â Tom leaned forward, elbows on the table. âIâve read your paper. And the abstract you submitted to the SBD conference. Are you still planning to go?â
âIf itâs accepted.â
âIâm sure it will be. Itâs excellent work. But it sounds like your project has progressed since you submitted that, and I need to know more about it. If I decide that you can work in my lab next year, Iâll cover you completelyâsalary, supplies, equipment, whatever you need. But I need to know where youâre at to make sure that youâre worth investing in.â
Olive felt her heart racing. This sounded promising. Very promising.
âHereâs the deal. Iâm going to give you two weeks to write up a report on everything youâve been doing so farâprotocols, findings, challenges. In two weeks, send me the report and Iâll make a decision based on it. Does that sound feasible?â
She grinned, nodding enthusiastically. âYes!â She could absolutely do that. Sheâd need to pull the intro from one of her papers, the methods from her lab protocols, the preliminary data from that grant sheâd applied for and not won. And sheâd have to rerun some of her analysesâjust to make sure that the report was absolutely flawless for Tom. It would be lots of work in little time, but who needed sleep? Or bathroom breaks?
âGreat. In the meantime Iâll see you around and we can chat more. Adam and I will be joined at the hip for a couple of weeks, since weâre working on that grant we just got. Are you coming to my talk tomorrow?â
Olive had no idea he was giving a talk, let alone when or where, but she said âOf course! Canât wait!â with the certainty of someone who had installed a countdown widget on her smartphone.
âAnd Iâm staying with Adam, so Iâll see you at his place.â
Oh no. âUm . . .â She risked a glance at Adam, who was unreadable. âSure. Though we usually meet at my place, so . . .â
âI see. You disapprove of his taxidermy collection, donât you?â Tom stood with a smirk. âExcuse me. Iâll get some coffee and be right back.â
The second he was gone, Olive instantly turned to Adam. Now that they were alone there were about ten million topics for them to debrief on, but the only thing she could think of was, âDo you really collect taxidermied animals?â
He gave her a scathing look and took his arm away from around her shoulders. She felt cold all of a sudden. Bereft.
âIâm sorry. I had no idea he was your friend, or that you two had a grant together. You do such different research, the possibility didnât even cross my mind.â
âYou did mention that you donât believe cancer researchers can benefit from collaborating with computational modelists.â
âYouââ She noticed the way his mouth was twitching and wondered when exactly theyâd gotten on teasing terms. âHow do you two know each other?â
âHe was a postdoc in my lab, back when I was a Ph.D. student. Weâve kept in touch and collaborated through the years.â
So he must be four or five years older than Adam.
âYou went to Harvard, right?â
He nodded, and a terrifying thought occurred to her. âWhat if he feels obliged to take me on because Iâm your fake girlfriend?â
âTom wonât. He once fired his cousin for breaking a flow cytometer. Heâs not exactly tenderhearted.â
Takes one to know one, she thought. âListen, Iâm sorry this is forcing you to lie to your friend. If you want to tell him that this is fake . . .â
Adam shook his head. âIf I did, Iâd never live it down.â
She let out a laugh. âYeah, I can see that. And honestly it wouldnât reflect well on me, either.â
âBut, Olive, if you do end up deciding that you want to go to Harvard, Iâll need you to keep it a secret until the end of September.â
She gasped, realizing the implications of his words. âOf course. If people know that Iâm leaving, the department chair will never believe that youâre not leaving, too. I hadnât even thought of it. I promise I wonât tell anyone! Well, except for Malcolm and Anh, but theyâre great at keeping secrets, theyâd neverââ
His eyebrow rose. Olive winced.
âI will make them keep this secret. I swear.â
âI appreciate it.â
She noticed that Tom was on his way back to the table and leaned closer to Adam to quickly whisper, âOne more thing. The talk he mentioned, the one heâs giving tomorrow?â
âThe one you âcanât waitâ for?â
Olive bit the inside of her cheek. âYes. When and where is it going to be?â
Adam laughed silently just as Tom sat down again. âDonât worry. Iâll email you the details.â