The Will in the Glass Office

The silence in the room had a weight of its own. The weight of decades-old mahogany, the genuine leather of the Chesterfield chairs, and the billions that hung, unseen, in the air-conditioned air. On the thirty-seventh floor of an office tower that pierced the Jakarta sky, time seemed to stand still, trapped in the rhythmic ticking of an antique regulator clock in the corner. Each tick-tock sounded like the countdown to an execution.

Adrian Mahesa felt the ticking in his temples. A rhythm as precise and inevitable as the way he ran his life and his company. He sat bolt upright, his back never touching the plush chair. His grey Zegna suit seemed like perfectly forged armour, every crease sharp, every stitch a declaration of control. On the cold glass desk, his long, slender fingers tapped a Montblanc pen. One tap for every wasted second. One tap for every milligram of eroded patience.

His eyes, as sharp as a trained eagle's, were fixed on the old man across the table. Mr Tirtayasa, the family solicitor for three generations, with his horn-rimmed glasses and a deceptively paternal aura. In his hands, he clutched a thick-bound document—the last will and testament of Grandfather Subroto, the patriarch, the visionary, the architect of all the chaos to come.

However, it wasn't the solicitor who was the source of the tension in Adrian's neck. The source sat three metres to his left, in an identical chair that seemed to radiate a different kind of heat.

Elara Kencana.

She was the antithesis of silence. Even in her stillness, there was a crackling energy that emanated from her. If Adrian was cold-forged steel, Elara was a wild, dancing flame. Today, her fire was encased in an emerald silk jumpsuit that hugged her curves in a way that was both provocative and elegant. Her wavy, jet-black hair fell over her shoulders, a dramatic contrast to her fair skin. Her crossed legs were restless, the tip of a red Louboutin shoe tapping the air, as if impatient to kick something. His head, perhaps.

Adrian could feel her gaze without needing to look. The same gaze that had once burned him, and then frozen him, all those years ago. Now, it held only ice. Ice forged from anger and betrayal.

"Very well," Mr Tirtayasa's voice broke the silence, as raspy as old parchment. He cleared his throat, adjusting his glasses. "We have been through all the standard asset divisions—property, stock portfolios, foundation donations. Now, we come to the core. The main clause concerning the future of the Mahesa Group and Kencana Mode."

Adrian stopped tapping his pen. The new silence felt sharper, more dangerous.

Elara sat up straighter, her chin lifting slightly. A gesture of defiance Adrian knew all too well.

Mr Tirtayasa turned to the final page with a deliberately slow movement. He read to himself for a moment, his lips moving soundlessly, as if savouring the suspense he was creating. Adrian swore he could see a flicker of amusement behind the thick lenses.

"As we all know," Mr Tirtayasa began, "the late Grandfather Subroto's greatest legacy was not money or property, but his vision in the world of fashion. Mahesa Group, passed down through the line of his firstborn son, and Kencana Mode, built from the vision he passed down through the line of his youngest daughter."

Adrian clenched his jaw. The son's line and the daughter's line. A polite way of saying: the warring dynasties. Classic versus Contemporary. Structure versus Spontaneity. Him versus her.

"It always saddened your grandfather to see the rivalry between the two fashion houses born from his roots," the solicitor continued, his eyes shifting from Adrian to Elara, and back again. "He believed that true strength lies not in domination, but in synergy."

Elara snorted softly, a sound barely audible yet laden with sarcasm. "Synergy. A beautiful word for capitulation."

Adrian didn't react, but he silently agreed. Synergy was an illusion. In business, there was only one winner.

"Therefore," Mr Tirtayasa said, lifting the document a little higher, "the final and most binding clause of this will reads as follows."

He took a deep breath. The ticking of the clock in the corner was deafening.

"'In order to receive the full inheritance rights to all controlling shares in their respective companies, Adrian Mahesa, as CEO of Mahesa Group, and Elara Kencana, as CEO of Kencana Mode, are hereby required to...'"

Mr Tirtayasa paused, his eyes staring pointedly at them both.

"'...collaborate.'"

One word. Just one word, but its impact in the room was that of a grenade.

Adrian felt his blood run cold. Collaborate. The word felt foreign and foul on his tongue. It was a word for idealists, for naive artists. Not for the CEO of a multi-billion-pound empire.

"Collaborate on what?" Adrian asked, his voice as cold as polar ice. He forced each syllable out with perfect control, refusing to show the shock that threatened to crack his facade.

"A large-scale charity project," Mr Tirtayasa answered, clearly having anticipated the question. "A single fashion show and the launch of a joint capsule collection under a new banner. The project will be named 'The Subroto Legacy Project'. All profits will be donated to the arts foundation established by your grandfather. The project must be a success, measured by positive media coverage and the donation target being met."

Elara laughed. Not a joyful laugh, but a sharp, bitter sound, like shattering glass.

"You must be joking, Mr Tirtayasa. A collaboration? With him?" Elara gestured towards Adrian with her chin, as if saying his name would soil her lips. "Mahesa Group would suck every ounce of creativity from the project and turn it into a collection of boring corporate uniforms."

"And Kencana Mode would turn it into an aimless, unprofitable circus parade," Adrian countered without turning his head, his voice flat but lethal. "A charity project still requires strategy and structure, Miss Kencana. A concept that may be foreign to you."

"Oh, of course, Mr Mahesa," Elara retorted, her tone dripping with saccharine poison. "Because nothing says inspiration like a hundred-page proposal and an eight-hour meeting just to decide on the colour of a thread."

"The right colour thread is the foundation of a masterpiece. A momentary impulse is a shortcut to failure."

"Enough!" Mr Tirtayasa's voice cut through their bickering like a whip. "This is not a request. It is a condition. A non-negotiable condition."

"And what are the consequences if we refuse?" asked Elara, her eyes narrowing dangerously. "Don't tell me Grandfather will rise from the grave to haunt us."

Mr Tirtayasa looked at her with a grave expression. "The consequences are far more... worldly, Elara. If either of you refuses, or if the project is deemed a failure due to sabotage from either party..."

He turned a page, pointing to a paragraph marked in red ink. "'...then all controlling shares of both companies, Mahesa Group and Kencana Mode, will be liquidated and their ownership transferred to the foundation's board of trustees.' In other words," Mr Tirtayasa removed his glasses, looking straight at them both, "you will both lose everything."

The silence that followed was a hundred times heavier than before. It was no longer an awkward silence, but a suffocating one. The silence of two sovereigns who had just realised their crowns were tied together by a single thread, and the other end was held by their mortal enemy.

Adrian's mind raced. Liquidation. Loss of control. Everything his father and grandfather had built, everything he had defended with blood and sweat, would simply vanish. Handed over to a foundation board of old bureaucrats who knew nothing about fashion. An insult. A corporate apocalypse. Grandfather Subroto had truly cornered him.

Across the room, he could see Elara had grown pale beneath her perfect make-up. Kencana Mode was her baby. She had built it from a small boutique into a respected brand, breaking out from the colossal shadow of Mahesa. To lose that company would be to lose her identity. To lose her soul.

"This... this is absurd," Elara hissed, her voice trembling with suppressed rage. "Grandfather would never have done this. He knew... he knew we couldn't..."

"Oh, he knew," Mr Tirtayasa interrupted calmly. "It's precisely because he knew that he wrote this clause. He called it 'shock therapy' for his two stubborn, favourite grandchildren."

"This isn't therapy, it's blackmail!" Elara exclaimed, finally getting to her feet. The pent-up energy now exploded. She paced in front of the giant glass window, her slender silhouette tense against the backdrop of skyscrapers. "He's holding our legacies hostage to force us to play happy families!"

"I wouldn't call it playing," Adrian said, finally speaking again. He too stood, his movements slower, more calculated. He walked to the other side of the desk, creating an equal distance between himself, Elara, and the solicitor. An unstable triangle of power. "This is a game of chess. And Grandfather has just delivered checkmate."

Elara stopped and turned to face him. "A game? You think this is all a game, Adrian? This is my life! My company!"

"And you think it isn't for me?" Adrian shot back, for the first time letting a sliver of heat creep into his voice. "Mahesa Group bears my family name. Thousands of employees depend on it. I will not let that legacy be destroyed because of someone's artistic ego."

"Artistic ego?" Elara laughed again, louder this time. "Is that what you call creativity and innovation? I'm sorry if my world isn't as square and rigid as one of your flow charts. At least I create something new, not just polish fifty-year-old designs and call them 'timeless classics'."

Every word was a poisoned dart, and every one hit its mark. Adrian felt a cold anger stab at his gut. He hated the way she dismissed the tradition and precision that were the pillars of Mahesa. Just as he hated the way she could make him lose his control with just a few words.

"The 'fifty-year-old designs' you speak of built the foundations of the industry you play in, Elara. Without Mahesa, Kencana Mode would be nothing more than an expensive hobby."

"And without a new vision like Kencana's, Mahesa would be a dusty fashion museum! Left behind by the times!"

"Better to be a respected museum than a fleeting trend that's forgotten tomorrow!"

"Mr Mahesa, Miss Kencana, please!" Mr Tirtayasa intervened, his voice firm. "Your arguing will not change the contents of this document. This will is legally binding and cannot be contested. You have two choices: work together and keep your companies, or refuse and lose everything. Full stop."

Elara stared at Adrian, her breath coming in short gasps, her chest rising and falling. Her eyes blazed, a mixture of rage, panic, and something deeper, something more wounded, that Adrian tried to block from his own mind. A memory of a night when those eyes had looked at him very differently.

He turned his gaze away, back to the city skyline. The view from Mr Tirtayasa's office was magnificent, but right now all Adrian could see was a very large, gilded cage.

"Fine," Elara said at last, her voice low and strained. She turned from the window, her face now a mask of cold composure, perfectly mimicking Adrian's own expression. "If this is the only way, then I'll do it. I'm not going to let my hard work disappear because of some ridiculous family melodrama."

Adrian gave a curt nod. "A logical decision. I also agree. For the sake of Mahesa Group."

They both spoke the words as if they had just signed a ceasefire, when they both knew they had just declared a new kind of war. A cold war to be fought in boardrooms, design studios, and at every press conference.

"Excellent," Mr Tirtayasa said with a thin smile that made Adrian suspect the old man knew exactly what was coming. "I'm glad you can both be mature about this."

Mature, Adrian thought. If only he knew.

"In that case, there's nothing more to discuss," Elara said, grabbing her handbag from the chair. "My team will contact your team to arrange an initial meeting. I have another appointment."

She turned to leave, clearly desperate to escape the suffocating room.

"One moment, Miss Kencana," Mr Tirtayasa stopped her.

Elara froze in the doorway.

Adrian had a bad feeling. This was too easy. Grandfather Subroto never did things the easy way.

Mr Tirtayasa picked up a smaller, thinner envelope from the pile of documents on his desk. It was sealed with the red wax of the family crest.

"There is one more thing," he said, his voice once again tinged with a theatrical note. "A 'First Mandate' from the deceased. An opening condition to ensure your collaboration begins in the right spirit."

Elara turned back slowly, a suspicious eyebrow raised. "The right spirit?"

Adrian said nothing, merely waiting for the next hammer to fall.

Mr Tirtayasa broke the wax seal with a silver letter opener. He extracted a single sheet of thick card and read from it in a clear, emotionless voice.

"'To begin The Subroto Legacy Project, the foundations must be built upon shared understanding and history. Therefore, Adrian and Elara's first task is...'"

Again, an agonising pause.

Mr Tirtayasa raised his head, looking directly at them both, his gaze no longer amused, but as sharp as a judge reading a verdict.

"'...to return to the place where it all began.'"

The room fell silent once more. But this time, the silence was filled with the echo of a past they had tried so hard to bury.

"The place... where it all began?" Elara whispered, the colour draining from her face again.

Adrian's mind was instantly thrown back to a dimly lit art gallery, to the scent of oil paint and white wine, to the soft strains of jazz music. And then, to a private balcony under a starry night sky, where laughter turned to whispers, and the distance between them vanished in an instant. A night of passion. A night of mistakes.

The night Adrian Mahesa lost his control, and Elara Kencana lost her heart.

Mr Tirtayasa folded the card and placed it on the glass desk. The small object looked like a ticking time bomb.

"The deceased did not specify the exact location," the solicitor said, as if oblivious to the storm he had just unleashed. "He wrote in his notes, 'Only the two of them will know the place.' You have one week to go there together and draw up the initial framework for the project's vision. No assistants, no bodyguards, no distractions. Just the two of you."

One week. Together. In that place.

This was no longer checkmate.

This was torture.

And as Adrian's eyes met Elara's across the room, he no longer saw ice or fire. He saw a flash of the exact same terror he felt in his own chest. Their cold war was about to be thrown into the crucible of their most dangerous memories. And this time, Adrian wasn't sure who would make it out alive.

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