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“If I drop the gun,” I said, and I hoped I sounded reasonable,
“how do I know you won’t put her in the fire anyway.”
He snarled at me, and it still caused a twinge of agony. “I’m not a murderer,” he said. “It has to be done right or it’
s just killing.”
“I’m not sure I can see a difference,” I said.
“You wouldn’t. You’re an aberration,” he said.
“How do I know you won’t kill us all anyway?” I said.
“You’re the one I need to feed to the fire,” he said. “Drop the gun and you can save this girl.”
“Not terribly convincing,” I said, stalling for time, hoping for that time to bring something.
“I don’t need to be,” he said. “This isn’t a stalemate—there are other people on this island, and they’ll be back out here soon. You can’t shoot them all. And the god is still here. But since you obviously need convincing, how about if I slice your girl a few times and let the blood flow persuade you?” He reached down to his hip, found nothing, and frowned. “My knife,” he said, and then his expression of puzzlement blossomed into one of great astonishment.
He gaped at me without saying a thing, simply holding his mouth wide open as if he was about to sing an aria.
And then he dropped to his knees, frowned, and pitched forward onto his face, revealing a knife blade protruding from his back—and also revealing Cody, standing behind him, smiling slightly as he watched the old man fall, and then looking up at me.
“Told you I was ready,” he said.
F O R T Y
The hurricane turned north at the last minute and ended up hitting us with nothing but a lot of rain and a little wind. The worst of the storm passed far to the north of Toro Key, and Cody, Astor, and I spent the remainder of the night locked in the elegant room with the couch in front of one door and a large overstuffed chair in front of the other. I called Deborah on the phone I found in the room, and then made a small bed out of cushions behind the bar, thinking that the thick mahogany would provide additional protection if it was needed.
It wasn’t. I sat with my borrowed pistol all night, watching the doors, and watching the kids sleep. And since nobody disturbed us, that was really not enough to keep a full-grown brain alive, so I thought, too.
I thought about what I would say to Cody when he woke up.
When he put the knife into the old man he had changed everything.
No matter what he thought, he was not ready merely because of what he had done. He had actually made things harder for himself.
The road was going to be a long tough one for him, and I didn’t know if I was good enough to keep his feet on it. I was not Harry, DEXTER IN THE DARK
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could never be anything like Harry. Harry had run on love, and I had a completely different operating system.
And what was that now? What was Dexter without Darkness?
How could I hope to live at all, let alone teach the children how to live, with a gaping gray vacuum inside me? The old man had said the Passenger would come back if I was in enough pain. Did I have to physically torture myself to call it home? How could I do that? I had just stood in burning pants watching Astor nearly thrown into a fire, and that hadn’t been enough to bring back the Passenger.
I still didn’t have any answers when Deborah arrived at dawn with the SWAT team and Chutsky. They found no one left on the island, and no clues as to where they might have gone. The bodies of the old man, Wilkins, and Starzak were tagged and bagged, and we all clambered onto the big Coast Guard helicopter to ride back to the mainland. Cody and Astor were thrilled of course, although they did an excellent job of pretending not to be impressed. And after all the hugs and weeping showered on them by Rita, and the general happy air of a job well done among the rest of them, life went on.
Just that: life went on. Nothing new happened, nothing within me was resolved, and no new direction revealed itself. It was simply a resumption of an aggressively plain ordinary existence that did more to grind me down further than all the physical pain in the world could have done. Perhaps the old man had been right—perhaps I had been an aberration. But I was not even that any longer.
I felt deflated. Not merely empty but finished somehow, as if whatever I came into the world to do was done now, and the hollow shell of me was left behind to live on the memories.
I still craved an answer to the personal absence that plagued me, and I had not received it. It now seemed likely that I never would. In my numbness I could never feel a pain deep enough to bring home the Dark Passenger. We were all safe and the bad guys 300
JEFF LINDSAY