Inspired, Ayu does something reckless. She takes her raw audio recordings—the uncut, un-muted files of the student’s panic—and syncs them to a silent CCTV clip of Bima laughing afterward. She uploads it to a new, anonymous TikTok account called (Voice of the 21st Floor) with one caption: "When the microphones don't lie. #PrankCultureIsViolence"
But Ayu has learned from Mang Ujang. She is no longer the sound engineer. She is the dalang .
Suara dari Lantai 21 (Voice from the 21st Floor)
She hijacks the studio’s own audio feed. Bima’s voice booms across the live stream, but Ayu overlays it with the real audio from his green room five minutes earlier: Bima snorting a line of powder and saying, "I don't care if the cat is lost. Just make the girl cry harder." Inspired, Ayu does something reckless
Her most popular video is not a prank. It is a 10-hour loop of a cat purring and a distant gamelan orchestra. It has 200 million calming streams.
"This is Suara dari Lantai 21. And this time... I am the one speaking."
Within 12 hours, it has 10 million views. The comment section in Indonesia erupts. "I used to laugh at his videos. Now I feel sick." "Who is this sound engineer? They are a hero." Bima’s PR team goes into overdrive. They don’t sue her—they try to absorb her. They offer Ayu a promotion: become the "Face of Authenticity" for a new wholesome channel. A huge contract. A house in Depok. But the fine print says she must sign an NDA about "all past audio recordings." Suara dari Lantai 21 (Voice from the 21st
Ayu refuses. She leaks a second video: the sound of Bima berating a cleaner for accidentally walking into a shot. The cleaner's voice, tiny and terrified, goes viral as a soundbite used in memes across the archipelago.
Dewi, the producer, secretly meets Ayu in a mall parking lot. "He has a vault," Dewi whispers. "A hard drive. It’s not just pranks. He blackmails celebrities who come on the show. He has footage of a minister's son doing drugs. If you release that, you end him. But you also end this whole industry." Bima schedules a "tell-all" live stream from his studio, promising to expose the "bitter, jealous ex-employee." He has 5 million concurrent viewers. He plays a doctored video of Ayu "stealing" equipment (it was her own microphone).
Ayu does not become a YouTuber. She uses the crowdfunding money sent by netizens to buy a small recording studio in the rice fields of Ubud. She records suling and rain on tin roofs. The fear? That’s the hook
The live stream goes silent. Then chaotic. Viewers see Bima's face freeze. His manager runs on screen. The comments turn into a tsunami of disgust.
Later, Bima reviews the footage. He is furious. "Where is the sound of her crying? The fear? That’s the hook , Ayu!"