Chapter 61: The Transfer
Special Agent Jim Crawford straightened his Italian silk tie as he walked through the empty corridors of Blackgate Penitentiary's maximum security wing. At thirty-eight, Crawford had spent fifteen years clawing his way up the federal law enforcement ladder, and he'd learned that ambitious men had to seize opportunities—no matter how distasteful the source.
The Firefly case landed on his desk a week after sentencing, and Crawford's eyes had lit up immediately. Not because of justice or national security, but because he saw his golden ticket to the Assistant Director position that had eluded him for two years.
"Advanced incendiary technology," Crawford muttered to himself, reviewing his fabricated notes as he approached Firefly's isolation cell. "Untraceable accelerants. Thermal targeting systems."
Crawford had embellished Lynns' actual capabilities significantly in his reports. The pathetic arsonist had some crude techniques, sure, but nothing revolutionary. That didn't matter—Crawford's superiors wouldn't know the difference, and by the time they discovered the truth, he'd already have his promotion and transfer to Washington.
Twenty-three elderly people had died in those fires, their final moments filled with agony and terror. Crawford felt nothing about their deaths except mild irritation that the media coverage complicated his narrative. Old people died every day—heart attacks, strokes, boredom. At least these ones died for something useful: advancing Jim Crawford's career.
Crawford had done his research on Lynns. The man was a broken, desperate psychopath who would agree to anything for better treatment. Perfect. Crawford could string him along with promises, extract whatever minimal value existed, then abandon him once the promotion came through. If Firefly killed more people later? Not Crawford's problem anymore.
He nodded to the guards and had them open Firefly's cell. Lynns sat on his narrow cot, his scarred face lighting up with hope as the federal agent entered.
"Agent Crawford," Firefly's voice wavered with desperation. "I assume you've considered my offer?"
"I have." Crawford pulled out a thick manila folder stuffed mostly with blank paper for dramatic effect. "Your proposed cooperation agreement is... comprehensive. Very impressive portfolio you have there."
Crawford suppressed a smirk. The "portfolio" was mostly speculation and half-truths he'd woven into an enticing fiction for his superiors. Lynns was too unstable and egotistical to contradict the enhanced version of his own abilities.
Firefly leaned forward eagerly. "I've spent years perfecting those techniques. No one else has my expertise with precision burning. Your people could use that."
"Absolutely," Crawford nodded with practiced sincerity. "Your methods could revolutionize federal operations. Precision strikes, elimination of threats, accurate removal of problems."
What Crawford really meant was that claiming to have recruited such an asset would revolutionize his own career trajectory. The Bureau loved to boast about turning high-value criminals into consultants. It didn't matter if the consultation produced actual results—just that it looked good in reports and budget meetings.
"But first, we need to get you into an environment where you can actually work," Crawford continued. "Federal minimum security. Better facilities. Workshop access. You understand."
Firefly's eyes gleamed with hope and madness. "Yes! Exactly what I need. I can't develop anything locked in this concrete tomb."
Crawford leaned forward conspiratorially. "Between you and me, Garfield—may I call you Garfield?—I don't give a damn about those nursing home residents. Weak, useless, drain on society anyway. What matters is maximizing your potential as an asset."
Firefly blinked, surprised by Crawford's casual cruelty. "Right... whatever you say. Just get me somewhere I can work."
"Those twenty-three deaths?" Crawford waved dismissively. "Statistical noise. Every year, thousands of elderly die from neglect and accidents. At least your victims served a purpose—they demonstrated your capabilities. Now we can leverage that for something productive."
Crawford's smile turned predatory. "You see, I have ambitions, Garfield. Big ambitions. This case is going to make both our careers. You're going to be my pet project, my success story. The dangerous criminal reformed into a valuable federal asset."
"I... yes. Whatever works." Firefly nodded frantically, willing to agree to anything.
"Here's how this plays out," Crawford continued. "I process your transfer, you provide some basic consultation on incendiary techniques—nothing too advanced at first, we don't want to spook anyone—and I use our successful partnership to secure my promotion to Assistant Director. Once I'm in D.C., you'll have a very comfortable arrangement. Minimum supervision, maximum privileges."
Crawford stood and began pacing, warming to his theme. "The beauty is that nobody actually verifies these consultation programs once they're approved. As long as the paperwork looks good and there are no major incidents, everyone assumes success. You could spend years in federal minimum security, supposedly developing new techniques, while I climb to Deputy Director."
"And if something goes wrong?" Firefly asked with the first hint of cunning he'd shown.
Crawford shrugged. "Plausible deniability. You're a reformed consultant who suffered an unfortunate relapse. I'm the dedicated agent who tried to rehabilitate you but couldn't overcome your fundamental nature. Either way, I come out clean."
The corruption was breathtaking in its cynicism. Crawford had no intention of actually monitoring Firefly's activities or ensuring public safety. He planned to warehouse a mass murderer in minimum security, claim credit for a non-existent rehabilitation program, and use the fabricated success to advance his own career.
"Just remember," Crawford's voice turned cold, "you exist solely to serve my needs now. Cross me, embarrass me, or fail to play your part convincingly, and I'll make sure you spend the rest of your miserable life in solitary confinement. Are we clear?"
Firefly nodded without much care. "Crystal clear."
Three hours later, Crawford was back in his federal building office, crafting the transfer papers. Every word was calculated for maximum impact on his superiors while providing minimum actual oversight or accountability.
Subject possesses specialized knowledge critical to ongoing federal operations. Transfer to federal consultation facility essential for development of advanced counter-terrorism capabilities. Ongoing cooperation represents significant value to national security interests.
Crawford had already identified his promotion timeline: six months of nominal consultation work, followed by a carefully orchestrated "breakthrough" that would generate headlines and commendations. He'd prepared false documentation, fabricated research data, and cultivated relationships with Bureau executives who would green-light his advancement.
The fact that minimum security meant Firefly would have near-total freedom to resume killing wasn't a flaw in Crawford's plan—it was irrelevant to his goals. Crawford would be long gone from the case by the time Lynns inevitably escaped or killed again. Some other agent would deal with the cleanup while Crawford enjoyed his corner office in Washington.
Crawford signed the transfer order with the satisfaction of a man who'd found the perfect angle. Those twenty-three elderly victims were stepping stones now, their deaths retroactively justified by his career advancement. He felt no guilt, only pride in his strategic thinking.
Garfield Lynns would be relocated to the federal facility in Pennsylvania within forty-eight hours, and Jim Crawford would have pulled off the con of his career. The naive idealists could keep their principles—Crawford preferred promotions.
After all, in a world full of monsters, why shouldn't the smartest predator rise to the top?
* * *
Across the city, Batman's cowled figure hunched over the Batcomputer's multiple screens in the Cave. Alfred had flagged the federal paperwork within hours of its filing—routine monitoring of Gotham criminals had become essential as the Architect's activities escalated.
"Federal transfer order," Alfred's voice crackled through the comm. "Garfield Lynns, designated high-value consultant for counter-terrorism applications. Destination: Millfield Federal Correctional Institution, Pennsylvania."
Batman's jaw clenched as he reviewed the facility details. Minimum security. Workshop access. Computer privileges. Everything a mass-murdering arsonist needed to continue his work under federal protection.
"Pull up Agent Crawford's personnel file," Batman ordered.
The data painted a disturbing picture: a career federal agent with a pattern of cutting corners and manipulating cases for personal advancement. Three internal investigations that had been quietly buried. A history of padding expense reports and falsifying consultation hours. Crawford wasn't a patriot—he was a parasite.
Batman cross-referenced Crawford's financial records, finding a lifestyle well beyond his government salary. Designer clothes, expensive car payments, a Georgetown townhouse mortgage that should have been impossible on his official income. The man was clearly supplementing his earnings through unauthorized means.
"Pull up Millfield's security profile," Batman ordered.
The facility was even worse than he'd feared: designed for white-collar criminals and non-violent offenders, with security measures suited for tax evaders rather than psychopathic killers. Firefly would have more freedom there than most citizens enjoyed in their daily lives.
Batman activated his encrypted FBI communication channel. Special Agent Sina Cho answered on the second ring.
"Batman. This is unexpected."
"Director, I'm calling about the Garfield Lynns transfer order. You need to investigate Agent Crawford immediately."
"The Firefly consultation case? That's Crawford's operation. Federal asset development—standard procedure for specialized criminal expertise."
"Crawford is using Lynns to advance his own career," Batman's voice carried cold fury. "He's planning to transfer a mass murderer to minimum security, falsify consultation reports, and claim credit for non-existent counter-terrorism breakthroughs."
Cho's tone grew guarded. "That's a serious accusation. What evidence do you have?"
"Crawford's living beyond his means, has a history of manipulating cases for personal gain, and is about to warehouse a serial killer who burned twenty-three people alive. This isn't asset development—it's corruption."
Batman transmitted Crawford's financial records to Cho's secure terminal. "Your agent sees Lynns as a career opportunity, not a public safety threat. He's willing to risk civilian lives for a promotion."
"These records..." Cho's voice trailed off as she reviewed the data. "How did you obtain financial information on a federal agent?"
"That's not important. What matters is that Crawford is about to release a killer into minimum security where he'll have access to materials and freedom to resume murdering. And Director—there's another factor you need to consider."
"Which is?"
"The Architect. Someone in Gotham has been eliminating criminals who escape justice through corruption or legal loopholes. If Crawford enables Lynns to avoid proper punishment, both of them will become targets."
Cho was quiet for a long moment. "Are you threatening federal personnel, Batman?"
"I'm warning you. The Architect has already infiltrated Blackgate Penitentiary, the Gotham courthouse, and City Council. This vigilante specifically targets corrupt officials who enable criminal behavior. Crawford's scheme makes him a perfect candidate for elimination."
Batman continued, "Your agent thinks he's playing a clever game to advance his career. He has no idea he's painting a target on his back for someone who's proven capable of penetrating any security system."
The line went quiet except for the sound of rapid typing.
"I'll... review Crawford's activities," Cho said finally. "But if you're connected to these Architect killings—"
"I'm trying to prevent them. The justice system worked in Lynns' case—life without parole in maximum security. Crawford's corruption is about to undo that justice and create two new targets: the killer he's releasing and the corrupt agent who enabled it."
Batman terminated the connection and leaned back in his chair. Despite his warning, he suspected Crawford's ambition would override any caution from his superiors. Corrupt officials always believed they were smarter than their predecessors, right up until they discovered otherwise.
The Architect had demonstrated particular viciousness toward officials who enabled criminal behavior for personal gain. A federal agent transferring a mass murderer to minimum security for career advancement would represent everything the vigilante despised.
Batman began preparing surveillance protocols for both Pennsylvania and Crawford's Georgetown residence. If the transfer proceeded, he would need to monitor a serial killer, a corrupt federal agent, and an executioner who had proven capable of striking anywhere.
The scales of justice were about to tip again and Batman feared the federal government was about to learn why Gotham's criminals had began fleeing the city rather than facinf Architect's Judgement.
Some lessons could only be taught in blood, and Jim Crawford was about to receive his education.
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