Sofia Vega was in her element, a gilded statue come to life. Her gown was a cascade of liquid gold, a bias-cut slip of silk that caught the light of a thousand crystal chandelier prisms and threw it back in defiance. Her dark hair was slicked back into a severe, elegant knot, a style that left no room for frivolity and exposed the clean, determined lines of her face. She moved through the crowd with the innate grace of someone who knew their legacy was woven into the very tapestries lining the walls. As the president of the Debate Society, she was the academy's "intellectual face," a role she wore as effortlessly as her diamond studs.
She was discussing the socioeconomic implications of targeted aid with a board member when she saw him. A ripple in her perfectly composed pond.
Dami arrived as he always did: late, and making an entrance out of his indifference. His tuxedo was jet black and impeccably tailored, but he'd forgone the tie, the collar of his stark white shirt open against his throat. The sleeves were rolled up once, revealing strong forearms-a deliberate, almost rebellious contrast to the uniform black-and-white formality of the room. The scholarship boy, a splash of vivid, unapologetic color in a sea of monochrome privilege. Camera flashes popped around him; the school's social media team loved the visual story he represented. Contrast, after all, always sold.
Sofia's smile tightened imperceptibly. Her friend Clara, ever the observer, leaned in, her whisper a soft counterpoint to the orchestra's swell.
"And the final piece of the puzzle arrives. Right on his own schedule."
Sofia took a delicate sip of her sparkling water, the bubbles like tiny needles on her tongue. "Of course he's late. He probably thinks punctuality is a bourgeois construct designed to stifle creativity."
Clara's grin was wide and knowing. "Admit it, Sof. You've been tracking the door for the last ten minutes. You were waiting for him to show up."
"In your dreams," Sofia replied, her voice cool as the ice in her glass. She treated the water like ammunition, each sip fortifying her for the inevitable collision.
The night unfolded with metronomic precision. The orchestra moved from Mozart to a tasteful jazz standard. Students spun across the polished marble floor, their movements a studied performance of elegance. Faculty weaved through the crowd, their smiles benevolent and assessing. For nearly two hours, the illusion of perfect harmony held.
Then came The Disaster.
It began, as these things often do, with a provocation disguised as banter. Sofia had retreated to the lavish refreshments table, a monument of silver platters and crystal bowls, for a momentary respite. Dami found her there, a predator drawn to the flicker of unease in his prey's territory.
"So, Miss Debate Queen," he began, his voice a low, teasing rumble that cut through the polite chatter. "I've been listening. A lot of lofty words about 'global responsibility.' Where's your personal speech on the virtue of generosity?"
She didn't turn, instead selecting a single, perfect strawberry from a gilded tray. "I'm preparing it mentally. Unlike some people, I believe in thinking before acting. It generally prevents public spectacles."
"Thinking is great," he conceded, stepping closer. She could smell the clean scent of his soap, a stark, earthy note amidst the floral perfumes. "But doing? Doing gets the applause. And pays the bills."
He reached for a glass of the blood-red pomegranate punch at the same moment she decided to set her empty water glass down. Their hands-his, capable and calloused; hers, slender and manicured-brushed. It was a static shock of contact, a jolt that made her flinch. The crystal punch glass, perched precariously on the edge of the table, teetered for a heart-stopping second before plunging.
Time seemed to slow, then explode.
The punch erupted. A wave of crimson liquid arced through the air, splattering across the front of Sofia's golden gown, soaking the silk instantly, staining it a ruinous burgundy. It drenched the pristine white of Dami's shirt, painting him like a victim in a slasher film. It cascaded over the tablecloth, pooled on the marble, and finally, catastrophically, splashed across the patent leather heels of the approaching Headmistress Dubois.
A collective, horrified gasp sucked the air from the ballroom. The orchestra screeched to a discordant halt. Every eye in the room was pinned to the scene of the crime: the shattered glass, the spreading stain, and the two students standing frozen in the epicenter of the raspberry-colored catastrophe.
Sofia looked down at her ruined dress, a garment that had cost more than some people's monthly rent. A cold, sharp fury crystallized within her. She lifted her gaze to Dami, her eyes wide with disbelief.
"You-" she choked out.
He, for once, seemed momentarily stunned. "I-"
"-are unbelievable!" The words were a sharp, precise dagger.
"Me?" he shot back, indignation rising to match her fury. "You're the one who elbowed my hand!"
"You were standing in the way! This is a refreshments table, not your personal runway!"
"Could've fooled me, with the way you pose every time you take a sip of water!"
Their voices rose, a sharp, ugly counterpoint to the preceding harmony. By the time a flustered Mr. Armitage and a stone-faced Headmistress Dubois intervened, the entire gala had been reduced to a silent, staring audience. The Headmistress's eyes, usually a mild blue, were chips of Arctic ice capable of melting glaciers.
"Enough," her voice cut through their bickering, quiet and absolute. She did not look at the ruined table or her stained shoes. Her gaze was fixed solely on them. "My office. Monday morning. Detention. Both of you. For one week. Together."
Sofia's jaw went slack. The humiliation was a physical blow. "But Headmistress-the Gala, it was an accident-"
"No 'buts,' Miss Vega," the Headmistress said, her tone leaving no room for appeal. She looked from Sofia's stained gown to Dami's ruined shirt. "Perhaps a week of shared labor will teach you both the discipline and decorum that seem to have been overlooked in your otherwise... exceptional records." A faint, almost cruel smile touched her lips. "You will report to the old archives library. Every afternoon. You will not leave until I am satisfied the task is complete."
As the Headmistress turned away, Dami muttered under his breath, low enough for only Sofia to hear, "Well, that should be fun. A week locked in a dusty room. I give it two days before one of us commits justifiable homicide."
Sofia shot him a glare that could have cut diamonds, her cheeks flushed with a heat that had nothing to do with the room's temperature. "If you so much as breathe too loudly, it'll be me."
♡
Scene: Detention, the next afternoon.
The old archives library was in a wing of the academy that time had forgotten. It smelled of dust, decaying paper, and the faint, sweet scent of old wood polish. Sunlight streamed through tall, lead-paned windows, illuminating motes of dust dancing in the air like forgotten spirits. Their punishment was Sisyphean in its monotony: clean, sort, and reorganize three centuries of neglected school records and forgotten texts.
For the first hour, the only sounds were the thud of books and the scrape of wooden chairs. Sofia attacked the towering shelves with a ferocity that was borderline violent, stacking ledgers from 1924 with enough force to shake the bookcase.
"You know," she said, her voice sharp in the silence, "you couldn't go one single night without orchestrating some form of chaos, could you? Was the attention from simply being here not enough?"
Dami was on the other side of a rolling ladder, dusting the top shelves with a rag that was now almost black. "Orchestrating? That's a fancy word for a simple accident. And for the record, your gown had the reaction time of a sloth. Just stood there and absorbed the punch like it was its destiny." He let out a short, half-laugh. "Very martyr-like of it, really."
"You are not funny."
"Then why are you smiling?"
She froze, her hands stilling on a leather-bound volume of botanical sketches. She wasn't. Was she? A traitorous muscle at the corner of her mouth had indeed twitched. She pressed her lips into a firm line. "I'm not. I'm contemplating the many ways one can dispose of a body in a library this large."
As the hours bled into one another, the sharp edges of their anger began to soften, worn down by the sheer, mindless boredom of the task. The banter continued, but its venom diluted. He started to whistle while he worked-a low, tuneful melody she didn't recognize but found, to her immense irritation, oddly calming. She pretended not to hear it, focusing intently on alphabetizing a box of correspondence from the 1950s.
He found a dusty, cloth-bound yearbook, its cover embossed with the academy's crest from a bygone era. Flipping it open, a cloud of dust made him sneeze.
"Look at this," he said, holding it up. "The class of 1898. Even they looked stressed out. See the frown on this guy? Probably just found out his trust fund was only a million."
Sofia couldn't help but glance over. The black-and-white photos showed rows of severe young men and women, their faces frozen in solemnity. "They probably were," she said, a dry note in her voice. "Probably from having to clean up a punch bowl one of their rivals spilled."
Their laughter, when it came, was sudden and unguarded. It echoed through the silent, dusty stacks-a warm, hesitant sound that seemed to startle the room itself. For a moment, the tension between them wasn't charged with animosity, but with a shared, absurd understanding of their predicament.
The moment shifted again when Sofia climbed a rickety wooden stool to reach the highest shelf. The stool wobbled precariously on the uneven floorboards. She let out a small, involuntary gasp, her arms flailing for balance. In an instant, Dami was there. His hands found her waist, steadying her with a firm, sure grip.
The contact was electric.
Her body went rigid. She could feel the warmth of his hands through the thin fabric of her blouse, the solid strength in his grip. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, wild rhythm. He held her for a beat too long, his face close to hers. She could see the flecks of gold in his brown eyes, the faint dusting of freckles across his nose that she'd never noticed before. The air crackled, thick with dust and something else, something unnameable.
Then, she cleared her throat, the sound unnaturally loud. "You can let go now."
He released her immediately, stepping back as if burned. A slow, teasing smile spread across his face, but it didn't quite reach his eyes, which held a new, unreadable intensity. "Wasn't holding that tight," he murmured, his voice softer than before.
She rolled her eyes, a practiced, dismissive gesture, but it was a feeble defense. Her cheeks, she knew, were burning a bright, telling pink-the same shade as the sunset punch that had started it all.
When the clock finally chimed the end of their detention, they walked out of the library side by side, the setting sun casting long, dramatic shadows across the parquet floor of the main hall. A careful, three-foot gap separated them, but a new rhythm pulsed in the space between-a silent, syncopated beat of something that was no longer purely hostile.
The Headmistress seemed to materialize from the shadows, her gaze sweeping over them, missing nothing.
"Miss Vega. Mr. Adebayo," she said, her voice a dry inquiry. "Have you learned your lesson?"
Sofia spoke first, her voice the model of contrite elegance. "Yes, Headmistress. We've... reflected deeply on our actions."
Dami nodded, his expression uncharacteristically solemn. "Very deeply," he echoed, his voice grave. "The profound importance of... stable punch glasses has been impressed upon us."
The Headmistress's eyes narrowed slightly, but she gave a curt nod and continued on her way. The moment she turned the corner, Sofia let out a long, exasperated breath.
"You're impossible," she whispered, shaking her head.
"And yet," Dami said, that infuriating, captivating smirk back in full force, "here you are. Still talking to me."
She scoffed, turning on her heel to walk away, her posture as perfect as ever. But she couldn't control the faint, undeniable smile that tugged at her lips, a secret she carried with her down the long, echoing corridor.
Blog Post, Later That Night:
La Rose Rumor Mill
Sponsored by Schadenfreude and Sparkling Water
📸 Photo: A slightly blurred, candid shot, taken from down the hall. Sofia and Dami are exiting the archives library. He's saying something, his hands gesturing, and she's looking away, but she's caught mid-laugh, a hand half-covering her mouth. The golden evening light frames them perfectly.
Caption: Ducklings Alert! 🦆 It seems a certain dynamic duo can't stay out of trouble-or, more interestingly, away from each other. A whole week of shared detention in the dusty old archives? That's a lot of forced proximity for a "rivalry" that seems to be generating more heat than hatred. The Great Gala Punch Bowl Catastrophe of 2024 might just be the meet-cute we never saw coming. Discuss. #Sofami #Damia #DucklingsInDetention #LaRoseDrama
♡
The comment section, as predicted, exploded.
GossipGawker99: I KNEW IT. IT'S THE ENEMIES-TO-LOVERS ARC WE DESERVE.
DebateSocietyPrez: This is slander. Sofia would never. She's probably planning his demise.
ArtBlockDami: lol he looks way too happy for someone who just spent 3 hours dusting.
ChemistryIsOptional: The tension in that photo could power the entire school for a week.
♡
And somewhere, between the irritation of the public dissection and the intriguing, unwelcome flutter in her stomach, Sofia Vega realized the game had irrevocably changed. This wasn't just a rivalry anymore. It was a prologue, and neither of them had any idea what the next chapter would hold.