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Chapter 72 - Arkham

The cell door clanked open with a metallic screech that jarred Nolan out of his thoughts.

Two officers stood in the corridor one with a clipboard, the other gripping the cuffs like he was itching for a reason.

"On your feet," the lead officer barked.

Nolan rose slowly. No witty remarks. No nervous fidgeting. Just a quiet shuffle forward as they latched the restraints to his wrists. His footsteps echoed down the dim corridor, trailing through the silence like a slow drumbeat of inevitability.

Outside, the night air was thick with humidity. A black GCPD van idled at the curb, its headlights off. No press. No spectacle. Just another ghost being moved through Gotham's system.

He climbed inside without resistance. The doors slammed shut behind him. Metal on metal. Locks clunked. Darkness.

He sat alone in the back. No window, just the rumble of the engine and the low murmur of police chatter from the front cab.

The van pulled out into the night.

City lights blurred past the grated slits on the side of the vehicle amber streetlamps flickering, casting long shadows between broken buildings. Gotham passed like a ghost town, Nolan couldn't fathom why he wanted to be out there once more. 

That place was truly his home now. 

Rain misted against the metal exterior. A wiper blade screeched somewhere far away. Inside, it was too quiet.

Then, a voice inside.

'This feels familiar,' Quentin muttered. 'Cold cuffs. Stale air. Another cage.'

Nolan didn't respond. He stared at the floor, breathing steady.

Vey broke the silence. 'You shouldn't be calm.'

'I know,' Nolan thought. 'But it's not like we can stop it now.'

They passed an overpass graffiti blinking in the headlights. Somewhere in the distance, a siren wailed and faded. Gotham always cried for help.

'Arkham,' Quentin whispered. 'Where they throw the insane.'

'We're not insane,' Nolan thought.

'Oh I'd beg to differ,' Vey rasped in laughter, 'But let's see what this place does to you.'

The van slowed.

They turned off the main road. Gravel crunched beneath the tires as the asylum rose ahead black stone, razorwire, and floodlights like search beams.

It didn't look like a hospital. It looked like a mausoleum.

The rear doors swung open with a sharp clunk.

A pair of orderlies stood flanking an officer. The lights behind them were too bright, casting them as silhouettes against the misty dark.

Nolan stepped out. The cuffs tugged at his wrists.

Inside, they walked him through intake stripped brick halls, bleach and rot in the air. A metal detector. A padded bench. A man in white behind a desk taking notes without looking up.

Eventually, they placed him in a small interview room.

No cuffs now. Just a low table, two chairs, a white noise machine humming like an insect in the corner, and a single camera blinking red on the wall.

The door creaked open.

A man in his sixties stepped in tweed jacket, silver beard, round glasses. Clipboard and pen in hand.

"Mr. Everleigh," he said politely, not offering a handshake. "Dr. Caulder. I'll be conducting your intake evaluation."

Nolan offered a nod. Neutral. Guarded.

Caulder sat across from him. "Let's start with something easy. Do you know why you're here?"

Nolan didn't hesitate. "The court wants to know if I'm mentally fit to stand trial."

"That's right," Caulder replied. "And do you believe you are?"

"I do."

Caulder wrote something down. "Good. Let's talk about identity. Who are you?"

"Kieran Everleigh obviously."

"No other names? No aliases?"

"No."

Caulder raised an eyebrow. "No voices in your head? No strange… episodes?"

A brief pause.

Then Nolan gave a faint smile. "Not unless I've been sleep-talking without knowing."

In the back of his mind, Quentin hissed. 'Chill, be calm.'

'You saying that makes me less calm!'

Vey's voice was dry and low. 'He's fishing. Don't take the bait.'

Caulder scribbled.

"Any violent thoughts lately?"

"No."

"Nightmares?"

"No."

"Hallucinations?"

"Nothing I'd consider abnormal."

Caulder studied him for a long moment. "You've been arrested for murder, bank robbery, conspiracy with known crime syndicates. You're calm about that."

"I've learned that panic doesn't help," Nolan said.

Caulder didn't blink. "You've also been caught talking to yourself. Long conversations. GCPD transcripts. Would you call that normal?"

"I think most people talk to themselves," Nolan replied.

Caulder closed the folder. "Fair enough."

Thirty minutes passed quickly. Dr. Caulder asked a plethora of questions of which Nolan answered all in a normal and realistic way. 

At no point did he slip or crack. 

At the end of the session, Dr. Caulder stood.

"You're not being cleared," he said flatly. "Further observation is required. You'll be held in the north wing under monitoring until we have a full psychological profile."

"…How long?"

Caulder didn't answer. He simply knocked on the door. It opened a moment later. Two guards entered to escort Nolan out.

As they led him away, silence.

Then Quentin whispered, 'he's not buying it' 

'No,' Vey agreed. 'but I don't think it matters, they want to keep us here' 

Nolan looked ahead as the doors of the observation wing opened. Cold white lights hummed overhead. The hallway stretched long, empty, silent.

He walked in.

A patient now.

***

They gathered in a boiler room beneath a shuttered textile mill in the Narrows. The walls were streaked with rust and years of old steam, the air thick and metallic. No guards, no lieutenants just the four of them.

A war council, called in the absence of their leader.

Terrell Gaines sat forward, elbows on knees, eyes shadowed beneath the frayed brim of his denim coat. The stitched scar from his jaw to ear was still healing, but he hadn't complained once.

"They moved him this morning," he said. "Arkham. Psychiatric evaluation first. After that? Trial. Could take weeks."

Marcy Liu didn't respond immediately. Her gray braid hung over her shoulder like a chain of silver links. She rested both hands on the table, calm and unreadable.

"He warned us this might happen," she said at last. Her voice barely above a whisper, but it held weight. Command.

Dre Matthews leaned back in his chair, arms folded across his massive chest. "Yeah, well, he didn't warn us how to run a damn empire without him."

"He trusted us," said Naima Rez, her voice cool and flat. She didn't shift in her seat. Her posture was military. Her tone, final. "That's why we're here."

Dre scoffed. "You really think the city's gonna give us time to figure it out? Mask's people are scattered, yeah, but we're sitting on a pile of stolen goods and half the city wants our heads."

Marcy reached into her worn canvas satchel and pulled out a thick manila folder, placing it in the center of the table. "We decrypted the rest last night."

Terrell flipped it open. Photographs. Financial records. Surveillance logs. Names tied to dirty money and darker secrets. One showed a judge meeting discreetly with a now-dead lieutenant. Another showed a group of GCPD cops entering a warehouse that mysteriously burned down days later.

"Leverage," Terrell muttered. "A hell of a lot of it."

"Not just leverage," Naima said. "This was a system. Black Mask wasn't just collecting secrets he was building a fortress of blackmail." 

"And now we have the keys," Dre grinned.

"Not yet," Marcy said, tone warning. "Not unless we play it right. Nolan doesn't just need to be freed he needs to be legitimized. If we move too loudly, the city turns on him. On us."

Terrell nodded slowly. "So we move quiet. Subtle. Start with the jury."

"We vet everyone," Naima added. "Every juror, every clerk, every public official. If they've got ties, we use them. If they're clean, we pressure them. Discreetly."

"Start small," Marcy agreed. "Shift public opinion just enough. Fund local advocacy groups. Leak stories. A donation here, a favor there. And the blackmail… we use it only when we have to."

Dre looked between them. "You really think we can flip the system that easy?"

"No," Naima said. "But I think we can play it enough to free Nolan." 

Terrell closed the folder and leaned back.

"He built all this with nothing," he said. "They treated us like garbage. He gave us a way out. That doesn't die just because he's behind a wall."

The room fell quiet again, heavy with the weight of what lay ahead. Not desperation. Not doubt.

Determination.

The city thought taking Nolan out would kill the movement.

But the movement had already grown roots too deep to cut.

And it was learning how to grow without its king.

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