Chapter 22: Campus Celebrity
Blackgate Penitentiary
The gavel's fall echoed like a skull cracking against stone. "Victor Zsasz, by order of the Gotham Supreme Court, your death sentence has been commuted to life imprisonment pending psychiatric evaluation."
Zsasz remained motionless in his orange jumpsuit, a scarred mannequin counting ceiling tiles with the look of someone with nothing else to do .
Forty-three across, twenty-seven down. One thousand, one hundred and sixty-one total—each tile reminding him of the lives he'd carved from existence.
"Mr. Zsasz," Judge leaned forward, his voice carrying the false authority of someone who'd never truly stared into the abyss, "do you understand what this means?"
Zsasz's head tilted down slowly, his face splitting into something that might have been a smile if smiles could hold such perfect emptiness.
"It means the game continues, your honor. Death would have been... inconvenient."
The public defender—some idealistic fool still believing in redemption—looked like he was swallowing bile. The prosecutor hurled his files down with the impotent rage of justice denied.
But Zsasz simply smiled, tracing the fresh scar on his forearm with reverent fingers. Three days prior, he'd carved it with a sharpened toothbrush after strangling his cellmate into merciful silence. The guards had discovered the corpse arranged in prayer position, peaceful as absolution itself.
Zsasz had gifted him transcendence.
"Remove the defendant," Judge commanded, but Zsasz was already rising gracefully—the movement of something that had transcended human limitations through perfect communion with violence. He just took a life and now he walks free, hiding behind the mask of temporary insanity. (As in not getting the rope)
As bailiffs moved to escort him, his gaze found a woman in the gallery's shadows. Middle-aged, clutching a photograph like a religious relic.
The mother of another victim... the numbers had lost meaning long ago. Mascara carved black rivers down her cheeks, tears for wounds that would never heal.
Zsasz gifted her a wink of pure understanding.
She would remember that wink in her nightmares until the day she died.
**Days later - Gotham University Psychology Department**
The faculty mixer reeked of cheap wine and academic desperation. Alex arrived precisely twenty minutes late—early enough to seem engaged, late enough to make an entrance. His thesis notes provided perfect camouflage among the intellectual peacocks grooming for tenure and recognition.
The lecture hall buzzed with the hollow energy of minds that studied monsters without ever meeting one.
Professors networked over plastic cups of wine, graduate students performed elaborate submission rituals, undergraduates circled like scavengers hoping for scraps of academic credibility.
"Alex!" Dr. Rebecca came beside him, wine already loosening her professional mask. "Perfect timing. I was just explaining your upcoming presentation to everyone who'll listen."
"Just pursuing knowledge," Alex replied, accepting a cup of wine. He surveyed the room with patience, memorising weaknesses and mapping social hierarchies.
Professor Martha was three drinks deep, cornering some undergraduate with her rat maze obsession—small minds studying smaller minds.
"Someone I want you to meet," Rebecca said, guiding him toward familiar blonde hair. "Though I suspect you two have already encountered each other."
Stephanie Brown turned as they approached, raising her wine cup in greeting that didn't quite reach her eyes. "Alex. How's the new thesis progressing?"
"Like archaeology—slow excavation of buried truths," he replied. They'd shared multiple classes, and she'd proven sharper than most. Always asking questions that cut beneath surface assumptions,"Your criminology project?"
"Actually, perfect timing." A dark-haired figure joined their conversation, extending his hand casually. "Tim Drake. We share Advanced Abnormal Psych—third row, left side."
Alex accepted the handshake, placing the face among his mental files. Quiet observer, meticulous note-taker, asked probing questions about criminal pathology with sophistication. "Pre-med track, correct?"
"Eventually. Current focus is forensic psychology." Tim's eyes held a kind of analytical depth that seemed unusual for his age. "Stephanie and I are collaborating on a project about violent offender recidivism. We thought you might provide insights."(Fancy term for repeat offending)
"What manner of insights?" Alex asked, though anticipation was already blooming in his chest.
Stephanie lowered her voice. "We've been examining the Victor Zsasz case. His sentence commutation a few days ago, the psychiatric evaluations claiming rehabilitation potential, likelihood of reoffense patterns..."
Alex felt familiar electricity coursing through his veins. They were asking him to profile a killer he was already stalking. The irony was intoxicating—like being asked to critique your own masterpiece while wearing someone else's face.
"Zsasz presents fascinating pathology," Alex said carefully. "What's your specific analytical angle?"
"Whether the judiciary made a catastrophic error," Tim replied. "Psychiatric reports claimed meaningful progress, evidence of potential rehabilitation. But his behavioral patterns suggest..."
"Complete impossibility of redemption," Alex finished, warming to the performance. "The commutation was worse than a mistake—it was willful blindness. Zsasz doesn't kill from trauma or any of his psychotic breaks. He kills because he's achieved perfect philosophical clarity about existence's fundamental meaninglessness."
A crowd began gathering around their conversation like moths drawn to flame. Dr. Rebecca practically glowed with pride as students and faculty pressed closer, hungry for expertise none of them possessed.
"Surely," Professor Martha wandered over, swaying with alcoholic confidence, "rehabilitation potential exists for every human being? That's the foundational principle of our entire justice system."
Alex smiled with the patience of someone explaining color to the blind. "That's the comforting delusion we use to avoid confronting uncomfortable truths, Professor. Some individuals are damaged beyond any possibility of repair. Zsasz began killing at twelve—neighborhood cats first, naturally progressing to human subjects. Each scar carved into his flesh represents a life he's liberated from existence. Do you genuinely believe therapy sessions will cure that level of philosophical commitment?"
"You speak like someone with intimate knowledge of his methodology," Tim said.
"Case files, police reports, crime scene photographs," Alex replied smoothly, truth serving as perfect camouflage. "I've been researching him lately for my thesis. Kill patterns, signature behaviors, body arrangement techniques—everything matches his philosophy about existence's inherent emptiness."
"If he resumes killing," Stephanie pressed, "what would you predict?"
The room had achieved perfect silence, hanging on Alex's every word like parishioners awaiting revelation.
This was how reputation was built—not through deception, but through genuine expertise that transcended everyone else's understanding.
"Escalation beyond previous parameters," Alex said with prophetic certainty. "Prison didn't diminish his compulsion at all—it compressed it into some kind of concentrated obsession. He'll feel outdated, like his opportunities for artistic expression were stolen. The kills will be more elaborate, more philosophically sophisticated. He'll compensate for his lost time through accelerated demonstration of his core beliefs."
"Christ," someone whispered from the crowd's periphery.
"Such certainty," Dr. Kellerman materialized at the group's edge, department head studying Alex with new interest. "How can you be so confident in these predictions?"
"Understanding requires temporary psychological fusion," Alex replied, each word precisely calculated. "To predict a killer's behavior, you must achieve momentary unity with their thought processes. The moment you impose normal moral frameworks on abnormal psychology, analytical objectivity dies."
"Have you considered law enforcement consultation?" Kellerman asked. "GCPD desperately needs someone with your level of insight."
"I've contemplated it," Alex said. "Though I worry about maintaining my academics if I become too deeply involved in active investigations."
The conversation continued for another twenty minutes, the academic crowd hanging on Alex's every insight about criminal psychology.
He was building exactly the reputation he needed—the brilliant student who understood monsters better than anyone else in the room.
Then the television mounted in the corner caught someone's attention.
"Wait—turn that up!" a graduate student called out, pointing at the screen.
Professor Martha fumbled for the remote, the room's chatter dying as the local news anchor's grave face filled the display. Her voice cut through the academic atmosphere like a blade through buttter.
"—breaking news this evening. Convicted serial killer Victor Zsasz has escaped from Blackgate Penitentiary during what was supposed to be a routine psychiatric consultation. The escape occurred at approximately 3:20 PM when Zsasz overpowered two guards and fled through a service entrance—"
The lecture hall erupted into shocked murmurs and gasps.
"Holy shit," someone whispered. "We were literally just talking about him."
Stephanie had gone pale, her wine cup trembling in her hands. "This is... this is exactly what you were predicting, Alex. The escalation, the timing—"
"Jesus Christ," Dr. Rebecca breathed, setting down her wine with shaking hands. "He's been free for hours. He could be anywhere in the city by now."
Tim's analytical mask had slipped completely, revealing something that looked almost like recognition mixed with suspicion.
His eyes fixed on Alex with uncomfortable intensity. "Your predictions about his behavior patterns... they were remarkably specific."
"Academic analysis based on case studies," Alex replied smoothly, "Unfortunately, criminal psychology often proves depressingly predictable."
"—considered extremely dangerous," the anchor continued. "GCPD has issued a citywide alert. Citizens are advised to remain indoors and report any suspicious activity immediately. Zsasz is recognizable by the extensive scarification covering his arms and torso—"
"Everyone needs to leave immediately," Dr. Kellerman announced, his earlier warmth replaced by cold authority. "Campus security will escort people to their vehicles. Nobody walks alone tonight."
The room began emptying rapidly, conversations replaced by nervous energy and hurried movement. Alex helped Dr. Rebecca gather scattered papers across the room.
"Your Talk Show next week," she said, hands still trembling. "Should we postpone it? With a killer loose in the city—"
"Absolutely not," Alex replied with quiet conviction. "If anything, recent events make understanding criminal psychology more vital than ever. The university shouldn't surrender to fear."
Near the exit, Tim and Stephanie lingered in hushed conversation, occasionally glancing in Alex's direction. Their words were too quiet to overhear, but their body language screamed suspicion.
"—told you something felt off about his insights—"
"—way he described the methodology, like he'd studied it firsthand—"
"—should probably contact—"
They fell silent as Alex approached, casual masks snapping back into place with practiced ease.
"You two need an escort to your vehicles?" Alex asked with friendly concern.
"We parked together," Tim replied, his voice carefully neutral. "Thanks though. You should be careful yourself—if your analysis is correct about his escalation patterns, tonight could be very dangerous for everyone in Gotham."
There was an undertone to Tim's words that Alex didn't quite like, but he maintained his facade of academic concern. "I'm sure GCPD will apprehend him quickly. Zsasz may be intelligent, but he's also compulsive. That combination rarely allows for long-term evasion."
As security guards began escorting the remaining faculty and students from the building, Alex felt his phone buzz. Unknown number: Package delivered. E.W. ready for consultation.
He deleted the message and smiled into the chaos around him. Emma Walsh had received her black envelope, and now Victor Zsasz was free to play his part in the grand design. The timing was exquisite—almost as if fate itself was orchestrating their collision.
As the gathering wound down, Alex assisted Dr. Rebecca with the final cleanup while campus security waited impatiently by the exits.
"You were absolutely magnetic tonight," she said, though her earlier enthusiasm was now tempered by genuine fear. "Even before... before the news. Did you see how captivated everyone became? That's natural teaching ability."
"Simply sharing accumulated knowledge," Alex replied, though internally he was calculating reputation dividends. Each public appearance reinforced his credibility. Soon he'd be too valuable to question, too respected to suspect.
Walking across campus under heavy security escort, Alex felt the familiar thrill of the hunt beginning. While everyone else radiated fear about Zsasz's escape, he experienced only anticipation.
**Later - The Underground**
Alex descended through shadows into Gotham's forgotten arteries, where the city's original infrastructure rotted beneath modern facades.
His footsteps echoed against brick walls that had witnessed a century of secrets, down tunnels that connected to maintenance shafts, storm drains, and the abandoned subway system that honeycombed beneath the metropolis.
The laboratory he'd constructed occupied a forgotten maintenance chamber, accessed through service tunnels that appeared on no current city maps. Generator power, sophisticated equipment acquired through careful purchases across multiple identities, everything needed for his true research.
The examination table held his latest acquisition—Victor Zsasz's psychiatric evaluation files, acquired through methods that would horrify his university colleagues. Photos of the killer's scars, detailed behavioral analysis, interview transcripts where Zsasz had performed sanity for gullible doctors.
But Alex needed more than academic data. He needed to understand Zsasz's fundamental drives, his core motivations, the philosophical framework that justified his actions. Only then could he demonstrate superior methodology.
Alex reviewed the killer's known locations—the halfway house where he was required to reside, the therapy sessions he attended with theatrical compliance, the walking routes he took through neighborhoods filled with potential victims.
Zsasz believed he was the perfect predator, evolution's answer to human weakness. He would learn otherwise. Now all thats left is for him to resurface.
For that, he has prepared bait—something he believes Zsasz would never refuse. Just a few more days, and his plans will be set in motion.
In the darkness above, Gotham slept fitfully, unaware that its newest monster was preparing to school one of its oldest in the true meaning of violence.
The student would become the teacher.
The hunter would become the hunted.
And Victor Zsasz would discover what it meant to be prey.
Note :
1) Just think of this chapter like a bunch of Sheldons talking to each other with academic jargon flying around.
2) It has to be stressed that even with all his powers, finding someone in a city is far more difficult than killing him.
3) MC is an original character, he do not know any of the superhero's identity. But he has his suspicions.
4) Tim & Stephanie have their suspicions afterall, Behind every supervillain is a person of pure intellect. Every genius is a potential supervillain in bat family's books.
**************
Advanced chapters on patre*n
DC : Architect of Vengeance
patre*n*com/Lord_Meph1sto