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It’s that moon again, slung so fat and low in the tropical night,
calling out across a curdled sky and into the quivering ears of that
dear old voice in the shadows, the Dark Passenger, nestled snug in
the backseat of the Dodge K-car of Dexter’s hypothetical soul.

That rascal moon, that loudmouthed leering Lucifer, calling down
across the empty sky to the dark hearts of the night monsters below,
calling them away to their joyful playgrounds. Calling, in fact, to
that monster right there, behind the oleander, tiger-striped with
moonlight through the leaves, his senses all on high as he waits for
just the right moment to leap from the shadows. It is Dexter in the
dark, listening to the terrible whispered suggestions that come
pouring down breathlessly into my shadowed hiding place.

My dear dark other self urges me to pounce-now-sink my moonlit fangs
into the oh-so-vulnerable flesh on the far side of the hedge. But
the time is not right and so I wait, watching cautiously as my
unsuspecting victim creeps past, eyes wide, knowing that something
is watching but not knowing that I am here, only three steely feet
away in the hedge. I could so easily slide out like the knife blade
I am, and work my wonderful magic-but I wait, suspected but unseen.

One long stealthy moment tiptoes into another and still I wait for
just the right time; the leap, the outstretched hand, the cold glee
as I see the terror spread across the face of my victim-

But no. Something is not right.

And now it is Dexter’s turn to feel the queasy prickling of eyes on
his back, the flutter of fear as I become more certain that
something is now hunting me. Some other night stalker is feeling the
sharp interior drool as he watches me from somewhere nearby-and I do
not like this thought.

And like a small clap of thunder the gleeful hand comes down out of
nowhere and onto me blindingly fast, and I glimpse the gleaming
teeth of a nine-year-old neighbor boy. “Gotcha! One, two, three on
Dexter!” And with the savage speed of the very young the rest of
them are there, giggling wildly and shouting at me as I stand in the
bushes humiliated. It is over. Six-year-old Cody stares at me,
disappointed, as though Dexter the Night God has let down his high
priest. Astor, his nine-year-old sister, joins in the hooting of the
kids before they skitter off into the dark once more, to new and
more complicated hiding places, leaving me so very alone in my
shame.

Dexter did not kick the can. And now Dexter is It. Again.

You may wonder, how can this be? How can Dexter’s night hunt be
reduced to this? Always before there has been some frightful twisted
predator awaiting the special attention of frightful twisted
Dexter-and here I am, stalking an empty Chef Boyardee ravioli can
that is guilty of nothing worse than bland sauce. Here I am,
frittering away precious time losing a game I have not played since
I was ten. Even worse, I am IT.

“One. Two. Three-” I call out, ever the fair and honest gamesman.

How can this be? How can Dexter the Demon feel the weight of that
moon and not be off among the entrails, slicing the life from
someone who needs very badly to feel the edge of Dexter’s keen
judgment? How is it possible on this kind of night for the Cold
Avenger to refuse to take the Dark Passenger out for a spin?

“Four. Five. Six.”

Harry, my wise foster father, had taught me the careful balance of
Need and Knife. He had taken a boy in whom he saw the unstoppable
need to kill-no changing that-and Harry had molded him into a man
who only killed the killers; Dexter the no-bloodhound, who hid
behind a human-seeming face and tracked down the truly naughty
serial killers who killed without code. And I would have been one of
them, if not for the Harry Plan. There are plenty of people who
deserve it, Dexter
, my wonderful foster-cop-father had said.

“Seven. Eight. Nine.”

He had taught me how to find these special playmates, how to be sure
they deserved a social call from me and my Dark Passenger. And even
better, he taught me how to get
away with it, as only a cop could teach. He had helped me to build a
plausible hidey-hole of a life, and drummed into me that I must fit
in, always, be relentlessly normal in all things.

And so I had learned how to dress neatly and smile and brush my
teeth. I had become a perfect fake human, saying the stupid and
pointless things that humans say to each other all day long. No one
suspected what crouched behind my perfect imitation smile. No one
except my foster sister, Deborah, of course, but she was coming to
accept the real me. After all, I could have been much worse. I could
have been a vicious raving monster who killed and killed and left
towers of rotting flesh in my wake. Instead, here I was on the side
of truth, justice, and the American way. Still a monster, of course,
but I cleaned up nicely afterward, and I was OUR monster, dressed in
red, white, and blue 100 percent synthetic virtue. And on those
nights when the moon is loudest I find the others, those who prey on
the innocent and do not play by the rules, and I make them go away
in small, carefully wrapped pieces.

This elegant formula had worked well through years of happy
inhumanity. In between playdates I maintained my perfectly average
lifestyle from a persistently ordinary apartment. I was never late
to work, I made the right jokes with coworkers, and I was useful and
unobtrusive in all things, just as Harry had taught me. My life as
an android was neat, balanced, and had real redeeming social value.

Until now. Somehow, here I was on a just-right night playing kick
the can with a flock of children, instead of playing Slice the
Slasher with a carefully chosen friend. And in a little while, when
the game was over, I would take Cody and Astor into their mother,
Rita’s, house, and she would bring me a can of beer, tuck the kids
into bed, and sit beside me on the couch.

How could this be? Was the Dark Passenger slipping into early
retirement? Had Dexter mellowed? Had I somehow turned the corner of
the long dark hall and come out on the wrong end as Dexter Domestic?
Would I ever again place that one drop of blood on the neat glass
slide, as I always did-my trophy from the hunt?

“Ten! Ready or not, here I come!”

Yes, indeed. Here I came.

But to what?

It started, of course, with Sergeant Doakes. Every superhero must
have an archenemy, and he was mine. I had done absolutely nothing to
him, and yet he had chosen to hound me, harry me from my good work.
Me and my shadow. And the irony of it: me, a hardworking
blood-spatter-pattern analyst for the very same police force that
employed him-we were on the same team. Was it fair for him to pursue
me like this, merely because every now and then I did a little bit
of moonlighting?

I knew Sergeant Doakes far better than I really wanted to, much more
than just from our professional connection. I had made it my
business to find out about him for one simple reason: he had never
liked me, in spite of the fact that I take great pride in being
charming and cheerful on a world-class level. But it almost seemed
like Doakes could tell it was all fake; all my handmade heartiness
bounced off him like June bugs off a windshield.

This naturally made me curious. I mean, really; what kind of person
could possibly dislike me? And so I had studied him just a little,
and I found out. The kind of person who could possibly dislike
Debonair Dexter was forty-eight, African American, and held the
department’s record for the bench press. According to the casual
gossip I had picked up, he was an army vet, and since coming to the
department had been involved in several fatal shootings, all of
which Internal Affairs had judged to be righteous.

But more important than all this, I had discovered firsthand that
somewhere behind the deep anger that always burned in his eyes there
lurked an echo of a chuckle from my own Dark Passenger. It was just
a tiny little chime of a very small bell, but I was sure. Doakes was
sharing space with something, just like I was. Not the same thing,
but something very similar, a panther to my tiger. Doakes was a cop,
but he was also a cold killer. I had no real proof of this, but I
was as sure as I could be without seeing him crush a jaywalker’s
larynx.

A reasonable being might think that he and I could find some common
ground; have a cup of coffee and compare our Passengers, exchange
trade talk and chitchat about dismemberment techniques. But no:
Doakes wanted me dead. And I found it difficult to share his point
of view.

Doakes had been working with Detective LaGuerta at the time of her
somewhat suspicious death, and since then his feelings toward me had
grown to be a bit more active than simple loathing. Doakes was
convinced that I’d had something to do with LaGuerta’s death. This
was totally untrue and completely unfair. All I had done was
watch-where’s the harm in that? Of course I had helped the real
killer escape, but what could you expect? What kind of person would
turn in his own brother? Especially when he did such neat work.

Well, live and let live, I always say. Or quite often, anyway.
Sergeant Doakes could think what he wanted to think, and that was
fine with me. There are still very few laws against thinking,
although I’m sure they’re working hard on that in Washington. No,
whatever suspicions the good sergeant had about me, he was welcome
to them. But now that he had decided to act on his impure thoughts
my life was a shambles. Dexter Derailed was fast becoming Dexter
Demented.

And why? How had this whole nasty mess begun? All I had done was try
to be myself.

(Continues…)




Excerpted from Dearly Devoted Dexter
by Jeff Lindsay
Copyright &copy 2005 by Jeff Lindsay.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.



Doubleday


Copyright © 2005

Jeff Lindsay

All right reserved.



ISBN: 0-385-51124-8


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