Ethan’s sediment analysis provided context for Clare’s chemical readings.

It was like watching two halves of a single picture finally align.

“This is what I was missing,” Clare said almost to herself.

“I’ve been staring at these numbers for months, thinking something was off, but I couldn’t figure out what.

It’s the temporal correlation.

Your data shows why mine fluctuates and your chemical analysis explains why the eelgrass recovery is so inconsistent in certain zones, Ethan said.

I thought it was substrate variation, but it’s actually nutrient availability.

We should combine the presentations, Clare said suddenly.

Not present separately, present together, show the integrated analysis.

Ethan looked at her.

That’s not the format we were given.

I know, but it’s better science.

It tells the complete story instead of two partial ones.

She met his eyes.

Unless you think that’s too complicated given given everything.

No, Ethan said.

I think it’s the right call.

Professionally.

Professionally, Clare echoed.

They hammered out the structure of a joint presentation, splitting sections, coordinating transitions, arguing over data interpretation in a way that felt startlingly familiar.

This was how they’d worked in graduate school.

intense, focused collaboration where disagreement sharpened ideas rather than creating conflict.

You’re still doing the thing with the verbal qualifiers, Clare said at one point, reviewing a slide Ethan had drafted.

You write, may indicate and potentially suggests when the data clearly shows something definitive.

Academic caution, Ethan defended.

Academic timidity, Clare countered, the eelgrass recovery isn’t potentially occurring, it’s occurring.

The data is unambiguous.

Own your findings.

You’re still doing the thing where you overstate confidence levels.

Ethan shot back, pointing at one of her graphs.

This correlation is 74.

That’s good.

But you’re presenting it like it’s.

9.

It’s a strong correlation in ecological data.

74 is excellent given the variables.

It’s good.

Not excellent.

There’s a difference.

They glared at each other across the table, then simultaneously started laughing.

We’re having the same arguments we had 17 years ago, Clare said.

Some things don’t change.

Apparently not.

The laughter faded, leaving something softer in its wake.

I miss this, Clare said quietly.

Working with someone who actually challenges my thinking instead of just nodding along.

Most people don’t enjoy being told they’re wrong, Ethan observed.

You never told me I was wrong.

You told me where my reasoning could be stronger.

That’s different.

She paused.

I missed having someone who understood that difference.

Ethan didn’t know what to say to that, so he focused on his coffee, which had gone cold again.

The morning crowd had thinned out.

The cafe was quiet except for the espresso machine and distant conversation.

“Can I ask you something?” Clare said after a moment.

“Sure.

” “What happened after after we graduated? After we went our separate ways.

” Ethan sat down his coffee cup carefully.

You want the whole story or the summary version? Whichever you’re comfortable sharing.

You took a breath.

I took the position in Seattle.

Spent 3 years doing fisheries research, mostly salmon population dynamics.

Met Rachel at a conference.

She was a marine policy analyst, smart and ambitious, and very clear about what she wanted from life.

We got married too quickly.

Had Liam a year later.

Realized we’d built a life that looked good on paper, but didn’t actually work in practice.

What didn’t work? She wanted the city, career advancement, networking, the whole urban professional trajectory.

I wanted fieldwork, teaching, somewhere quieter.

We tried to compromise, but you can’t really split the difference on that.

He smiled without humor.

She wasn’t wrong.

Neither was I.

We just wanted incompatible things.

Clare nodded slowly.

How long ago did it end? Officially 6 years.

But it was over before that.

We just took a while to admit it.

And Liam lives with me most of the year.

Spends summers and some holidays with Rachel in Portland.

It works okay.

He’s adapted better than we probably deserved.

He sounds like a great kid.

He is.

He’s the best thing I’ve ever done, and I didn’t even do it intentionally.

Ethan looked at her.

What about you? What happened after Monteray? Claire’s fingers traced the edge of her tablet.

I took the posttock at Woods Hole.

spent four years there, then got recruited to the Atlantic Maritime Institute in Boston.

The work was incredible, exactly what I’d hoped for.

And then I met someone, Thomas.

He was charming and smart and said all the right things about supporting my career.

Her voice went flat.

Turned out supporting my career meant something different to him than it did to me.

What happened? I got pregnant, found out it was triplets, which was it was terrifying and amazing and completely overwhelming.

Thomas seemed excited at first.

Then reality set in.

Three babies.

My job was demanding, his job was demanding, and he started resenting every late night I spent in the lab.

Started making comments about priorities and sacrifice.

She paused.

When the girls were 6 months old, he told me I had to choose, the career or the family.

Ethan felt anger spike in his chest.

That’s not a choice anyone should have to make.

That’s what I said.

So, he left.

Just left.

He’s paid child support, minimally involved from a distance, but he’s never really been a father to them.

Clare’s jaw tightened.

I don’t regret how it turned out.

I regret trusting him.

But the girls, they’re everything.

I can see that, Ethan said gently.

The way they are with you, the way they look at the world.

You’ve done something remarkable, Clare.

So have you.

They sat in silence for a moment, the weight of their separate histories settling between them.

We should probably get back to work, Clare said eventually, though she didn’t move.

The presentation won’t write itself.

Write work, Ethan pulled up another file.

So if we’re presenting jointly, we need a unified conclusion.

What’s the main takeaway we want the institute directors to remember? that integrated analysis produces better results than siloed research, Clare said immediately.

And that the restoration is working, but it’s fragile.

We need continued monitoring and adaptive management.

Both, Clare decided, we need both messages.

They worked for another hour refining slides, scripting transitions, arguing over word choices, and graph formatting.

It felt professional and collaborative, and underneath all of that, like something else entirely.

like a door that had been closed for 17 years was slowly, tentatively beginning to open.

At 10:30, Clare glanced at her watch and swore softly, “I have to go.

Meeting with the sediment analysis team at 11:00.

” Same.

I’ve got a graduate student presentation at 11:15.

They packed up their materials and synchronized efficiency.

Another echo of old patterns.

Outside the cafe, the October morning had warmed into something almost pleasant.

The harbor sparkled under bright sun.

A few fishing boats were heading out late for the day’s work.

This was good, Clare said.

Productive.

We should do it again before Wednesday.

Make sure the presentation flows smoothly.

Tomorrow? Ethan suggested.

Same time.

I can’t tomorrow.

The girls have a doctor’s appointment.

Wednesday morning.

Wednesday is the presentation.

Right.

Of course.

Clare frowned, thinking.

What about tonight after the kids are in bed? We could video call, go through the slides one more time.

It was reasonable, practical, completely professional.

That works, Ethan said.

8:30.

Perfect.

I’ll send you a meeting link.

She started to walk away, then turned back.

Ethan, thank you for being professional about this, for not making it weird.

It’s already weird, he pointed out.

Weirder then.

We’re scientists, Clare.

We’re good at compartmentalizing.

She smiled, but it didn’t quite reach her eyes.

Right.

Compartmentalizing.

Then she was gone, walking toward the harbor parking lot, her dark hair catching the sunlight.

Ethan stood on the sidewalk for a long moment, watching her leave, wondering if compartmentalizing was actually possible when the thing you were trying to compartmentalize was a person who’d once meant everything.

That evening, Liam talked non-stop through dinner about Rowan Whitmore and her sisters.

They know so much, Dad.

Like Rowan can identify fish larvy just by looking at them under a microscope.

In third grade, and Laya, that’s one of her sisters.

She’s writing a report on ocean acidification.

She asked if I wanted to help.

Can I? Can I work on a project with them? Sure, Ethan said, only half listening as he cleaned up dishes and mentally rehearsed presentation points.

And Tess, she’s the quiet one.

She showed me this drawing she made of the kelp forest ecosystem.

It was so detailed, Dad.

She knew about the trophic levels and everything.

That’s great, buddy.

Their mom takes them to the beach a lot.

They do field observations together like we do.

Rowan says her mom is teaching them real scientific method.

Liam paused dramatically.

I think we should invite them to go to the tide pools with us this weekend.

That got Ethan’s full attention.

What? The Whites? We should invite them.

Then you could meet Dr.

Whitmore and talk about science and I could show Rowan my specimen collection and it would be really fun.

Ethan’s mind raced through implications, complications, possibilities.

I don’t think, please.

Liam deployed his most effective weapon, the earnest, hopeful expression that made it nearly impossible to say no.

Rowan’s my friend.

I want to hang out with her outside of school.

And you said you thought meeting colleagues could be good networking.

I never said that.

You said something like that about professional relationships.

Ethan sighed.

Let me think about it.

That means you’re going to say no.

It means I’m going to think about it.

At 8:30, Ethan’s laptop chimed with an incoming video call.

He accepted and Claire’s face appeared on screen, slightly pixelated, sitting in what looked like a home office with bookshelves visible behind her.

“Hi,” she said.

“Can you hear me?” “Okay, perfectly.

Can you hear me?” “Yes, okay, good.

Technology cooperating?” She pulled up a file.

“So, I’ve been thinking about the introduction.

I think we should start with the big picture context before diving into specific data.

” They worked through the presentation systematically.

Claire sharing her screen, Ethan offering suggestions, both of them refining language and adjusting graphics.

It was efficient and focused, two professionals doing their jobs, except every so often something would slip through.

Clare would laugh at one of Ethan’s dry observations about institutional bureaucracy, and the sound would be exactly the same as 17 years ago.

Ethan would catch himself watching her expressions instead of the slides.

The way she bit her lower lip when concentrating, the small crease that appeared between her eyebrows when she was dissatisfied with something.

You’re not listening, Clare said at one point.

Ethan blinked.

What? I just suggested we cut the entire third section and you said sounds good without even looking at it.

Sorry.

Distracted.

By what? you, Ethan thought, by the strange cognitive dissonance of working with you like this is normal when nothing about this is normal.

Long day, he said instead, what was the suggestion? They pushed through to the end of the presentation, arriving at a final version that was genuinely strong, maybe stronger than anything either of them could have produced alone.

“This is good work,” Clare said, saving the file.

“The directors are going to be impressed.

Credit goes to both of us.

collaboration, she agreed.

An awkward pause settled over the video call.

They’d finished the work.

There was no professional reason to keep talking, but neither of them moved to end the call.

So, Clare said finally, Liam and Rowan have apparently become friends.

Ethan laughed.

I heard Liam spent dinner lobbying for a joint tidepool expedition this weekend.

Rowan did the same thing.

very scientifically reasoned argument about the educational benefits of peer learning.

These kids are dangerous.

Terrifyingly smart, Clare agreed.

What did you tell him? That I’d think about it.

I said the same thing, she paused.

Should we think about it together? Is that a good idea? Probably not, Clare admitted.

But they’re going to keep asking.

And honestly, Ethan, keeping them separated seems, I don’t know, artificial.

They’re already friends at school.

We’re already colleagues.

Maybe we’re overthinking this.

Maybe it’s a tidepool expedition, not a wedding, Clare said, then immediately winced.

Sorry, bad example.

It’s fine.

Ethan considered the idea, testing it against his instincts.

Saturday morning, low tides at 9:15.

The North Beach, best tide pools in the area.

Okay, Clare said slowly.

Saturday morning purely as parents facilitating their children’s scientific education.

Exactly.

This is professional networking, Clare added, though she was smiling.

Extremely professional.

We’ll bring field guides and specimen containers.

And maintain appropriate colleague boundaries, Ethan said.

Obviously.

They looked at each other through their respective screens, both clearly aware they were trying to convince themselves of something neither quite believed.

I should go.

Clare said early morning tomorrow.

Same here.

See you Wednesday for the presentation.

Unless we run into each other before then.

Small town apparently.

Apparently.

She hesitated.

Ethan, this working together like this.

It’s been really good.

I had forgotten what it felt like to collaborate with someone who actually gets it.

I know what you mean, Ethan said quietly.

After the call ended, he sat staring at the blank screen for a long time.

The rest of the week passed in a strange blur.

Wednesday’s presentation went better than expected.

The institute directors were genuinely impressed by the integrated analysis, asking detailed follow-up questions that suggested real interest in funding the next phase of research.

Ethan and Clare presented as a seamless unit, finishing each other’s sentences, fielding questions with complimentary expertise.

You two work well together, Dr.

Patricia Valdez, the institute’s research director, observed afterward.

How long have you been collaborating? Not long, Clare said carefully.

Well, keep it up.

This is the kind of cross-disciplinary synthesis we need more of.

Saturday morning arrived cool and bright, the kind of perfect autumn day that made Coastal Maine feel like the most beautiful place on Earth.

Ethan and Liam arrived at the North Beach parking lot to find Claire’s car already there.

a slightly battered Honda with three car seats in the back and what appeared to be approximately 7,000 children’s books scattered across the rear shelf.

The triplets tumbled out wearing matching rubber boots in different colors, yellow, blue, and red.

Mr.

Calder, Laya shouted, running over.

Liam said you have a master’s degree in marine biology.

Do you also have a PhD? Because mom has a PhD.

I do have a PhD, Ethan confirmed, amused.

Good.

Rowan said you did, but she wanted me to verify.

Rowan herself was already deep in conversation with Liam about optimal tide poolool search patterns while Tess hung back near Clare, holding her mother’s hand and watching the beach with dreamy interest.

Clare approached, carrying two canvas bags that appeared to contain enough scientific equipment for a month-long expedition.

“Hi,” she said.

“Hi,” Ethan replied.

This is extremely professional colleague networking, Ethan finished.

Exactly what I was going to say.

They looked at each other and smiled.

And something warm and dangerous flickered between them.

Beach rules, Clare announced loudly, addressing all four children.

Stay where we can see you.

Watch for waves.

Put organisms back where you found them.

And if anyone finds anything cool, call us over instead of trying to pick it up.

Mom, we know, Laya said with exaggerated patience.

We do this all the time.

I’m aware.

I’m still saying it.

The children scattered immediately, Liam leading the way toward the rocky outcrops where the best tide pools formed.

The adults followed at a more sedate pace, carefully not walking too close together.

“Your kids are amazing,” Ethan said after a moment.

“So is yours.

The shark tooth collection is legendary, apparently.

” He takes after his father.

Obsessive documentation of everything pretty much.

They reached the tide pools and settled into the familiar rhythm of field observation, helping children identify organisms, answering rapidfire questions, mediating disputes over who got to use the magnifying glass.

Liam and Rowan worked as a surprisingly effective team, while Laya provided enthusiastic commentary on everything, and Tess made careful sketches in a waterproof notebook.

She’s incredibly talented, Ethan observed, watching Tess capture the delicate structure of a sea anemone.

She sees things differently than other people, Clare said.

More visually, more artistically.

The other two think in words and numbers.

Tess thinks in images.

Liam’s similar.

He can visualize three-dimensional structures in a way that still surprises me.

They stood side by side watching their children, and the morning stretched out warm and bright around them.

This is nice, Clare said quietly.

Yeah, Ethan agreed.

It really is.

And for just that moment, standing on a main beach in the October sunshine, it felt simple and easy and right, like they were just two parents watching their kids explore tide pools.

Nothing complicated, nothing fraught.

The moment couldn’t last, of course.

Moments like that never did.

But while it lasted, it felt like something worth holding on to.

The tide pool expedition became a regular Saturday ritual without anyone formally deciding it should.

The following weekend, Liam asked if they could go back to the North Beach.

And when Ethan texted Clare to see if the girls were interested, her response came in less than 2 minutes, already packing the field guides.

By the third Saturday, they’d established an unspoken routine.

Ethan brought the specimen containers and identification books.

Clare brought the first aid kit and an alarming quantity of snacks.

The children brought their boundless energy and increasingly sophisticated questions about marine ecology.

And the adults brought their careful dance of proximity and distance, working hard to maintain the fiction that this was purely about facilitating their children’s education.

It was during the fourth Saturday expedition in late October with the air turning sharp and the water ice cold that the careful balance began to shift.

They were examining a particularly impressive tide pool carved deep into the granite and teeming with life.

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