Chapter 72: Psychological Warfare
Batman's mind snapped back to clarity as soon as he felt the cold grip around his ankle.
Without hesitation, Batman drove his armored boot down hard, crushing the grip. The brittle hand snapped with a sharp crack, bones splintering as the flesh tore apart, scattering fragments across the floor.
He immediately rolled backward, putting distance between himself and the source of the attack. Coming up in a defensive crouch behind an overturned table, Batman scanned the cafeteria with enhanced optics.
A guard's body—one with massive claw marks across his chest—twitched slightly. Then another. Then another.
One by one, the corpses began to stir.
The first to rise was the guard, his throat a gaping wound that should have made speech impossible. Yet when he opened his ruined mouth, words emerged clearly.
"Why didn't you kill Firefly, Batman?"
Batman's hand moved instinctively to his utility belt, but he didn't draw a weapon yet.
His analytical mind processed what he was witnessing—the Architect's biomass manipulation extending beyond living tissue into some form of post-mortem control.
A second corpse—one of the inmates who'd been torn apart by the creature—pushed itself upright despite having most of its torso cavity exposed. "Didn't Martin ask you to?"
"Martin begged you to end that monster," added a third voice, this one from another whose skull had been partially caved in. "But your precious moral code was more important than justice."
More bodies were rising now, their movements jerky and unnatural like marionettes controlled by an inexperienced puppeteer. Batman counted eight reanimated corpses, all speaking in unison despite their various states of mutilation.
"Now because of you," they said together, "the Architect followed Firefly here and killed us."
"Their deaths are on your hands, Batman."
"Your failure created this massacre."
"How many more will die because you refuse to do what's necessary?"
Batman's jaw tightened beneath his cowl. The psychological manipulation was crude but effective—targeting his deepest fears about the consequences of his moral code. But the Dark Knight had faced similar attacks before from enemies like Scarecrow and the Joker.
"I know this is you, Architect," Batman said calmly, his voice carrying through the cafeteria's emergency lighting. "Trying to mess with my mind won't change what I am."
The corpses tilted their heads in unison, a gesture that was disturbingly synchronized. Then the guard's ruined face twisted into something resembling a smile.
"What you are," the corpse repeated, "is a failure."
They attacked as one.
Batman's training took over instantly. As the first wave of reanimated bodies lunged toward him, he rolled backward over an overturned table, using the furniture as temporary cover while assessing their movement patterns.
The corpses moved with inhuman coordination but lacked the flow of living people. Their joints were stiff, their reflexes dulled by death. However, what they lacked in finesse, they made up for in sheer relentless aggression.
Batman launched himself at the nearest corpse—the partially decapitated inmate—driving his armored fist through its exposed ribcage. The impact should have been devastating, but the creature barely staggered. Black ichor oozed from the wound, but it continued attacking with mindless determination.
"Conventional tactics ineffective," Batman muttered, dodging a swipe from another criminal's claws. "Need to target the control mechanism."
He vaulted over the undead's lunge and landed behind the group, immediately looking for any signs of neural manipulation.
Sure enough, he spotted thin red filaments at the base of each skull—biomass tendrils that had to be maintaining the connection to their puppet master.
Batman drew a pair of batarangs designed for precision cutting and hurled them at the nearest two corpses. The weapons severed the neural filaments cleanly, and both bodies immediately collapsed like their strings had been cut.
But the remaining six adapted to his strategy, growing flesh over their neck areas covering the weaknesseswhile pressing their attack more aggressively.
One corpse grabbed Batman's cape, yanking him off balance while another rake clawed fingers across his armor. The Aegis Protocol's plating held, but the force of the attack sent him stumbling into the serving counter.
"You could have prevented all of this," the guard's corpse hissed as it closed in. "One bullet. One moment of decisive action. But you're too weak."
Batman rolled aside as claws raked the counter where his head had been moments before. He came up with an uppercut that snapped the corpse's head back, revealing more of those red neural filaments.
But cutting individual connections was taking too long. The corpses were learning, adapting, becoming more coordinated with each exchange. Batman needed a different approach.
From his utility belt, he withdrew a cluster of specialized grenades—cryo-bombs designed for crowd control. The devices were originally meant for compacting Architect, but they would serve his current purpose.
"Sub-zero protocol," Batman announced, pulling the pins and hurling the grenades throughout the cafeteria.
The effect was immediate and devastating. Supercooled gas erupted from each device, instantly dropping the temperature in the room by sixty degrees.
The effect was gradual but inexorable. The corpses' movements slowed dramatically as their flesh began to freeze and crystallize. The guard's corpse, still closest to Batman, fought against the encroaching ice as frost spread across its torn uniform.
"Your psychological warfare failed. Try harder next time," Batman said, watching as the creature's movements became increasingly sluggish.
The ruined face managed one final, defiant smile as ice crystals formed around its mouth. "This... isn't... over," it whispered, the words barely audible as the cold seized its face.
Within thirty seconds, all six remaining corpses were locked in place, their bodies encased in a thin layer of ice that made movement impossible.
Batman stood among the frozen tableau, his breath visible in the suddenly frigid air. The Aegis Protocol's heating systems activated automatically to maintain his core temperature.
But even as he spoke, his HUD was flashing with new alerts. The mesh surveillance network was detecting movement in the service corridors—fast, aggressive movement tracking toward the location where several inmates had fled.
Batman's tactical analysis painted a grim picture. The creature from his earlier surveillance was hunting the survivors. Two inmates were moving through a corridor intersection roughly three hundred yards from his current position.
Without hesitation, Batman activated his cape's gliding mechanisms and launched himself through the destroyed cafeteria entrance. As he moved, he remotely activated the defensive drones he'd positioned throughout the facility earlier.
"All units, converge on service corridor junction seven," he commanded through his comms. "Target: large fleshy organism. Mission: delay and harass, do not engage directly."
The drones responded immediately, their micro-jets propelling them through the facility's ventilation system toward the specified coordinates. Batman could monitor their progress through his HUD while he navigated the facility's corridors at maximum speed.
Through the lead drone's camera, he caught sight of his targets—two inmates moving cautiously through a darkened intersection. The older man was limping slightly, probably injured during their escape. The younger inmate stayed close beside him, both men jumping at every sound.
"We can't keep running like this," the younger man was saying, his voice carrying clearly through the drone's audio pickups. "That thing just now... what if there are more of them?"
"Don't think about it," the older inmate replied, though his voice shook with exhaustion and terror. "Just keep moving. We find a way out, we get the hell away from this place, and we never look back."
They were approaching a four-way intersection where the service corridors met the main prisoner movement areas.
Batman was still fifty yards away when his lead drone's camera picked up something.
Clinging to the ceiling directly above the intersection was one of the transformed dogs. Its elongated spine allowed it to move across the concrete surface like some grotesque spider.
The creature's exposed brain tissue pulsed rhythmically as it tracked the approaching inmates' movement. Thick strands of acidic saliva dripped from its unhinged jaw, sizzling against the floor tiles below.
Batman's drone captured the moment perfectly—two terrified men walking unknowingly toward their death while a nightmare waited in the darkness above them.
"Drone strike, now!" Batman commanded, but he knew the drones were a few seconds away to reach them in time.
The inmates were three steps away from the intersection.
Two steps.
One step.
The creature's muscles coiled, preparing to drop onto its unsuspecting prey.
Notes :
Finally back.
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