A shadow fell across his desk. It was Gus, his right-hand man, looking nervous.
In the psych ward, isolated by glass and heavy medication, Charles "Haywire" Patoshik was drawing. The walls of his cell were covered in frantic charcoal sketches—geometric shapes, swirls, and lines that made no sense to anyone but him.
By the time the eight men crawl through the pipe in the season finale, they are no longer just inmates. They are a broken family bound by a single, desperate thread: the hope that on the other side of that wall, they can become someone else. Whether they succeed is what makes television history.
From the floor below, the manic, high-pitched laughter of Theodore "T-Bag" Bagwell echoed through the cellblock. He was holding court, telling a story to his cronies, his pocket held out in a crude gesture of dominance. T-Bag had already sniffed out that something was happening with the new fish. He smelled a secret, and secrets were currency in Fox River.