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Love on the Brain(38)

Author:Ali Hazelwood

We hammer out details for a couple more hours, deciding that for the next weeks I’ll focus on mapping the individual brains of the first batch of astronauts while engineering refines the shell. With Levi present, his team tends to agree to my suggestions more quickly—a phenomenon known as Sausage Referencing?. Well, to Annie and me, at least. In Cockcluster? or WurstFest? situations, having a man vouch for you will help you be taken seriously—the better-regarded the man, the higher his Sausage Referencing? power.

Notable example: Dr. Curie was not originally included in the Nobel Prize nomination for the radioactivity theory she had come up with, until G?sta Mittag-Leffler, a Swedish mathematician dude, interceded for her with the all-male award committee. Less notable example: halfway through my meeting with the engineers, when I point out that we won’t be able to stimulate deep into the temporal lobe, Maybe Fred tells me, “Actually, we can. I took a neuroscience class in undergrad.” Oh, boy. That was probably two weeks ago. “I’m pretty sure they stimulated the medial temporal lobe.”

I sigh. On the inside. “Who?”

“Something . . . Welch? In Chicago?”

“Jack Walsh? Northwestern?”

“Yeah.”

I nod and smile. Though maybe I shouldn’t smile. Maybe the reason I have to deal with this crap is that I smile too much. “Jack did not stimulate the hippocampus directly—he stimulated occipital areas connected to it.”

“But in the paper—”

“Fred,” Levi says. He’s sitting back in his chair, dwarfing it, holding a half-eaten apple in his right hand. “I think we can take the word of a Ph.D.-trained neuroscientist with dozens of publications on this,” he adds, calm but authoritative. Then he takes another bite of his apple, and that’s the end of the conversation.

See? Sausage Referencing?. Works every time. And every time it makes me want to flip a table, but I just move on to the next topic. What can I say? I’m tired.

And now I crave an apple.

My stomach growls when I slip out to fill my water bottle. I’m thinking wistfully of the Lean Cuisine currently unthawing at my desk when I hear it.

“Meow.”

I recognize the chirpy quality of it immediately. It’s my calico—well, the calico—peeking at me from behind the water fountain.

“Hey, sweetie.” I go down on my knees to pet her. “Where did you go the other day?”

Chirp, meow. Some purrs.

“What are you doing all alone?”

A headbutt.

“Are you hunting mice? Do you work as c-law enforcement?” I laugh at my own pun. The cat gives me a scathing look and wanders away. “Oh, come on, it was a good joke. It was hiss-terical!”

One last indignant glare, and she turns the corner. I giggle, then hear steps coming up behind me. I don’t look back. I don’t need to, since I already know who it is. “There was a cat,” I say weakly.

Levi walks past me to fill his water bottle. He’s so tall, he needs to hunch over the fountain. His biceps shift under the cotton of his shirt. Was he this big in grad school? Or did I get even shorter? Maybe it’s the stress. Maybe early onset osteoporosis is kicking in. Gotta buy some calcium-set tofu. “Right,” he says, noncommittal. His eyes are on the water.

“No, for real.”

“Uh-huh.”

“I’m serious. She went that way.” I point to my right. Levi looks in that direction with a polite nod and then walks back inside the room, sipping his water.

I stay on my knees in the dead middle of the hallway and sigh. I don’t care if Levi Wardass believes me.

He probably hates cats anyway.

* * *

? ? ?

“EQUIPMENT’S READY. AND Guy set up our computers,” Rocío says as we walk back to our apartments.

I smile into the soupy afternoon air. “Awesome. How was working with Guy and Kaylee?”

“How was working with your lifelong sworn archfoe?”

I give her the stink eye. “Ro.” My time with her is perfect practice for the adolescent daughter I might never have.

“It was fine,” she mutters. I frown at her tone.

“You sure?”

“Yeah.”

“It doesn’t sound fine. Is there a problem?”

“Yes. Several. Global warming, systemic racism, the overpopulation of ecological niches, the unnecessary American remake of Swedish romantic horror masterpiece Let the Right One In—”

“Rocío.” I stop on the sidewalk. “If there’s something off in the way you’re being treated, if Guy’s making you uncomfortable, please feel free to—”

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