Chapter 32: The Art of Meaninglessness
(Warning : Mature themes ahead)
The old warehouse reeked of rust and dried blood. This was Zsasz's private hell, where he'd built his twisted shrine to suffering.
Alex carried the unconscious killer through the maze of interconnected rooms, past walls lined with victim photos and disturbing sketches. Zsasz had turned this place into his personal museum of death, each room chronicling another chapter in his descent into madness.
When Zsasz came to, he found himself strung up between two metal beams, arms stretched wide. His eyes opened with that calmness that had kept him alive through his countless run-ins with Batman. Even suspended and helpless, he actually smiled.
"Well, well. Alex Thorne." Zsasz's voice held that same flat, emotionless tone. "Came for a consultation? I do love talking about my work."
Alex stepped out of the shadows, and something shifted in his appearance. The young, earnest face began to change, features flowing like melted wax. What emerged looked human enough, but there was something fundamentally wrong about the proportions.
Zsasz's smile widened into something genuinely delighted. "Oh, this is beautiful." His voice pause as the pieces fell into place.
"I should have known it was you. The Architect. The one who's been cleaning house in my city. The stories about your shapeshifting were real afterall."
"Your city?" Alex's voice deepened as his transformation completed. "You think Gotham belongs to you?"
"I think Gotham understands me," Zsasz said with genuine warmth, as if discussing a beloved pet. "Every scream, every plea for mercy—the city drinks it up. We're partners, you could say. I provide the art, Gotham provides the canvas."
"Tell me about Emma Walsh," Alex said suddenly.
Zsasz's eyes lit up like Christmas morning. "Ah, Emma. My little songbird who flew away. Do you know what she did when I had her tied up in her apartment? She fought like a wildcat. Magnificent woman—even all the injuries, she was spitting curses at me, protecting her daughter." His voice took on an admiring tone. " She was one of the difficult ones. Took me some time to break her. "
"She escaped."
"She did!" Zsasz said with genuine professional respect. "Clever girl."
"Of course. And when I find her again—and I will—give her the super deluxe treatment she deserves. I'm going to make her watch while I start on her daughter first this time." Zsasz's voice took on the tone of someone describing their favorite recipe. "Children make the best motivators, you know."
"You won't touch them."
"Won't I? I've been studying her too for the past few days. I know all about those little security details the cops provides her and her daughter. "
He spoke about Emma and her daughter like they were just an afterthought. But Zsasz wasn't finished.
"I remember this businessman I worked on last year," the killer continued conversationally. "Corporate type, thought he was tough. Had him strung up for hours, explaining exactly what I was going to do to his family after I finished with him. You know what finally broke him? When I started describing his five-year-old daughter in detail—what she wore to school, which playground she liked, how she'd look with one of my scars."
Zsasz's smile became something truly obscene. "He begged me to take his wife instead. He even offered me his own mother. Started naming every person he knew, bargaining with their lives for his daughter's safety. That's when I knew I'd found my true calling—not just killing, but revealing what people really are when hope dies."
"Enough," Alex said quietly.
"The beautiful part?" Zsasz continued, lost in his own memories. "After I killed him anyway, I sent photos of his corpse to his wife. She killed herself that same night. Murder-suicide—took the daughter with her. One kill, three deaths. Buy one Get two free. Hahahaha. The Ultimate Combo Package. Now that's efficiency."
"I said enough." Strange tendrils began to emerge from Alex's fingertips.
"You want to talk about art Zsasz? About purpose? Let me show you what real artistry looks like."
The first thing to go were the scars. ach mark Zsasz had carved into his flesh to commemorate a kill. The Architect's biomass didn't just erase them—it devoured them completely, leaving smooth, unmarked skin behind.
Zsasz's reaction was immediate. His eyes went wide with pure terror as he watched his life's work disappear. "NO! What are you doing? Those scars are everything! Each one is a life I freed! You can't just—"
"I can. I am." Alex's voice was cold as winter. "Thirty-three scars. Thirty-three people who died in agony. But they mattered to someone. You? You're going to be forgotten completely."
"No! Stop! They're my legacy! My purpose!" For the first time in years, Victor Zsasz begged. "Without them, I'm nothing! I'm nobody!"
"Exactly." Another section of scarred flesh vanished. "That businessman you mentioned? His name was Paul Walker. He worked sixty hours a week to provide for his family. His daughter Mia loved unicorns and wanted to be a veterinarian. His wife Maya taught kindergarten. They mattered. They had meaning. You were just the disease that killed them."
As each scar disappeared, Zsasz became more frantic, thrashing against his restraints. "You don't understand! I gave their deaths purpose! Without me, they died for nothing!"
"They died because you murdered them. Their lives had purpose because they were loved. You're just the monster who ended them." Alex consumed the last of the scars, leaving Zsasz's skin completely unmarked. "There. Now you're as meaningless as you always were."
Zsasz stared down at his smooth, featureless skin in horror. The physical record of his crimes—his identity, his purpose, his very sense of self—had been erased. He could tolerate death, but this..
"What have you done to me!!!" Zsasz raged.
"Now for the rest," Alex said calmly.
The limbs went next. Strange tendrils consumed Zsasz's arms with the flesh simply ceasing to exist.
The killer screamed—not from physical pain, but from the existential terror of watching himself disappear piece by piece.
"What are you?" he gasped as his legs vanished.
"I'm what crawls out when the law fails completely, Zsasz. When judges let monsters walk free. When cops protect killers instead of victims." The biomass continued its work, leaving only Zsasz's torso and head.
"I'm the consequence of your actions, Victor. Every victim you carved up, every family you destroyed—I'm what that creates."
"Please," Zsasz whimpered, reduced now to just a head and torso. "I'll stop. I'll never kill again. I'll—"
"You'll never do anything again." Alex's voice carried terrible finality. "But first, you're going to experience what your victims felt. The helplessness. The terror. The knowledge that no one is coming to save you."
Then began the systematic removal of Zsasz's senses, one by one.
His sense of smell went first. Biomass invaded his nasal passages, not blocking them but consuming the very structures that processed scent. Zsasz's face contorted in confusion as the musty warehouse air became nothing—not scentless, but incomprehensible.
"What—what's happening to me?" His voice cracked with panic.
"I'm taking away everything that connects you to the world," Alex replied. "Just like you took away everything from your victims."
His hearing disappeared next. The biomass crept into his ears, absorbing the delicate mechanisms of sound. The last thing Zsasz heard was his own scream, cut off mid-note as silence swallowed him whole. His mouth kept moving, forming words he could no longer hear himself speak.
The terror in his eyes was absolute now as he realized he was trapped in perfect silence.
His sense of taste followed. The biomass invaded his mouth, consuming taste buds and nerve endings. Zsasz tried to bite his own tongue—a final desperate attempt to feel something, anything—but even that sensation was stolen from him.
Then came touch. The biomass invaded his nervous system, severing connections between tactile receptors and brain. Not numbness—numbness was still a sensation. This was the complete absence of physical awareness. Total sensory deprivation.
Zsasz could no longer feel the restraints, couldn't sense temperature or pressure or pain. His body became a foreign object he could see but not experience.
His eyes darted frantically, the only sense remaining, the only connection to the outside world. Those eyes held pure, animal terror as he watched Alex approach for the final act.
"This is the worst part, Victor," Alex said, knowing Zsasz could see his lips moving but couldn't hear the words. "You're going to watch your last connection to reality disappear. Then you'll spend the eternity alone with your thoughts, unable to perceive anything else. Ever."
Zsasz's eyes went impossibly wide as he understood what was coming. He tried to close them, tried to look away, but found he'd lost even that control.
The biomass crept over his eyes slowly, deliberately. Not all at once, but gradually, like a curtain falling. First, his peripheral vision dimmed. Then shadows crept in from the edges, slowly consuming his field of sight. Zsasz watched his world shrink to a pinpoint of light, then to nothing.
Absolute darkness. Absolute silence. Absolute isolation.
When it was finished, what remained was a perfectly round sphere resembling a head sitting atop a limbless torso. No eyes, no mouth, no nose, no sensory organs of any kind. Both head and torso were completely smooth, featureless, sustained by organic tubes that had grown into the warehouse's foundation.
Inside that biological prison, Victor Zsasz remained fully conscious, fully aware, but completely severed from any external stimuli. He would spend eternity contemplating the meaninglessness he had inflicted on others, with nothing but his own thoughts for company.
"Sleep tight, Victor," Alex whispered to the sphere, knowing it could neither hear nor respond. "You wanted to show people what they really were when everything was stripped away. Now you get to find out what you are when everything is gone."
"This is my Art dedicated to you. My Art of Meaninglessness."
---
When Batman arrived twenty minutes later, following the trail the Architect had left, nothing could have prepared him for what awaited in the central chamber.
The smell hit him first—something organic and wrong, like flesh that had been twisted against all natural law. His tactical light swept across the room, past the victim photos and crude sketches, until it landed on something impossible.
In the center of the room was a perfectly spherical head sitting atop a limbless torso. Both were completely smooth, unmarked, featureless—like something sculpted from pale clay. No eyes, no mouth, no nose. No scars, no distinguishing marks of any kind. Organic tubes connected the torso to what appeared to be a biological life support system that had grown into the warehouse's foundation.
The torso pulsed with a slow, steady rhythm like a heartbeat.
Batman approached cautiously, scanner already running. The readings were impossible. Human DNA, but restructured, reorganized. Living tissue that had been transformed beyond current medical understanding.
"Alfred," he whispered into his comm. "I need a full forensic team. And prep the containment protocols."
"Another Architect scene, Master Bruce?"
"Worse." Batman circled the organic form, noting the broken scales scattered nearby—the killer's signature. "Its not just an execution anymore. He's... creating something new."
The body showed no signs of sensory organs, no way to perceive or interact with the outside world. But Batman's scanners detected complex neural activity—conscious thought patterns trapped within this humanoid prison.
"This thing is still alive," he breathed. "Still conscious."
Based on the DNA analysis, this had once been Victor Zsasz. Now it was something else entirely—a perfect sphere of unmarked flesh, denied even the basic dignity of a human form.
For the first time in years, Batman felt genuine horror at what passed for justice in his city. The bony broken scales caught his flashlight beam, and the message was clear:
The scales of justice are broken. I am the balance.
But what kind of balance required reducing a human being to this?
As sirens wailed in the distance, Batman took one last look at the sphere that had once been Victor Zsasz. Inside that featureless prison, one of Gotham's most dangerous killers would spend eternity in complete sensory deprivation, conscious but unable to perceive anything beyond his own thoughts.
It was perfect justice.
It was absolute nightmare.
Notes :
I never thought my previous chapter would get such a good response. Thanks for the support guys !!
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