Rivals In Love and War
Chapter 1: The Glitch in the System
The glass-walled conference room of *Sterling & Vance Architects* felt less like a workspace and more like a gladiatorial arena.
Evana stood at the head of the mahogany table, her posture rigid, her skirt suit tailored to a knife-edge. She was a woman who navigated boardrooms like a predator, her sharp wit enough to dismantle a client’s budget query in seconds. She expected silence, deference, and ideally, competence.
She got none of that from Eric.
"The structural integrity of the atrium is weak," Eric said, his voice a low, lazy drawl that scraped against Evana’s nerves. He hadn’t even bothered to look up from his tablet, his thumb lazily swiping across the blueprint. "It’s going to collapse under the snow load in three winters. It looks like a vanity project designed by a toddler with a glitter addiction."
Evana didn't blink. She tapped her pen against the surface of the table—*tap, tap, tap*—a rhythmic warning. "It’s a cantilevered glass aesthetic, Eric. It requires technical finesse. If you were capable of looking past your own ego, you might notice the steel reinforcement grid I added on page forty."
He finally looked up. His eyes—a shade of grey that made her instinctively want to draw her own boundaries three feet further away—were gleaming with amusement. "I saw it. It’s clunky. Hideous, actually. It ruins the line of the roof."
"It keeps the roof *up*," she snapped, her calm veneer fracturing just enough to let a spike of irritation show.
"Barely." He leaned back in his chair, folding his arms. He wore his arrogance like a favorite jacket—totally comfortable, entirely irritating. "I redesigned the support columns while you were busy color-coding your presentation slides."
Evana leaned forward, putting her hands flat on the table, entering his personal space until she could see the faint smirk playing on his lips. "You touched my CAD file without authorisation?"
"I improved it," he countered, his voice dropping an octave, turning the room suddenly, suffocatingly small. "You’re welcome."
"Your arrogance isn't a personality trait, Eric," she hissed, her control slipping fast. "It's a liability. You didn't 'improve' anything. You sabotaged the aesthetic flow of the west wing."
"I saved the building from being a literal disaster," he retorted, standing up. He was taller than her, and he knew it, and he used it to loom just enough to be aggravating. "But I suppose when your entire identity is wrapped up in being 'perfect,' any deviation feels like a personal attack."
"Get out," Evana said, her voice dangerously quiet.
The junior architects in the room had long since stopped pretending to look at their notes. They were watching the show, paralyzed by the sheer, friction-heavy violence of their dynamic.
Eric didn't move. He picked up his coffee cup, took a slow, calculated sip while looking straight into her eyes, and then set it down with a deliberate *clack*. "Are we done here, Evana? Or are you going to throw a tantrum because I can actually see the flaws you’re too proud to admit?"
"I won again," she said, though it sounded more like a challenge than a statement of fact. "I had the project approval signed by the partners this morning before you even walked in. You wasted your morning redesigning columns for a layout that doesn't exist anymore."
His smirk faltered, just for a microsecond. A flicker of... *what was that? Respect? Annoyance?*
"I didn't lose," he said, his eyes darkening.
"Oh, you did," she said, a small, vindictive smile ghosting her lips. "Check your inbox. The 'revised' atrium got the green light from the board exactly ten minutes ago. Your changes? Those are going to sit in a folder somewhere, gathering dust."
Eric walked slowly around the table until he was standing just inches from her. He was close enough that she could smell cedarwood and cold, clean air. He leaned down, his voice a whisper that only she could hear.
"Maybe I didn't lose," he murmured. "Maybe I just wanted to see if you’d actually pay attention to the supports if I made them ugly."
Evana gripped the edge of the table until her knuckles turned white. "You’re lying."
"Am I?" He arched a brow, turning toward the door. "Keep playing games, Evana. But keep in mind—eventually, you run out of moves."
He walked out, leaving the door to swing softly on its hinges.
Evana stood there, her heart hammering against her ribs, staring at the empty space where he had been standing. She hated him. She hated his arrogance, his brilliance, and the fact that he was the only person in this entire building who could make her forget how to breathe in the middle of a meeting.
She grabbed the glass of water from the table and downed it in one go.
"He's right," she whispered to the empty room. "He is absolutely, dangerously right.
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Comments
Tooba Fatma
lovely wonderful storyline keep going 🌹🌹🌹🌟🌟🌟💞💞💞💞❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-05-07
1
Tooba Fatma
can't wait for the next episodes 😃😃😄😄
2026-05-07
0