...and then inside, Dexter is asking Anderson if he thinks he got the right guy, and Anderson's like, considering that he tried to blow my head off, yeah, I'm pretty happy with my police work. He adds, however, that he'll check the slugs Leo used against the ones removed, I suppose, from Mos Def. Dexter then notices that the DVD player is on, and when he pops it open, he finds a DVD labeled "Security Footage From Garage." I doubt the shooter would have labeled it as such, but it's not like they wouldn't have checked it out anyway...
...and at the station, they see the shooting play out, but the assailant's face is never shown, which, given the purpose for which this all turns out to have been done, makes little enough sense, but I suppose you could spin it. Anderson thinks the shooter looks like Leo, even down to his wardrobe, and Deb's like, great work, and speaking of grisly death, I'm having a party at Casa Murder-Suicide tonight, and it's BYOB, as with all my busy aimless wandering around the office, I don't have time to stop by the liquor store. As usual with this show, I'm barely paraphrasing. Anderson's face looks like he can't think of many places he'd be less likely to show up, and after he and Masuka clear out of there, Deb tells Dexter she knows this doesn't make up for Mos Def, but at least they got the bad guy. When she's gone, however, Dexter thinks something's not right, and upon rewatch of the DVD, sees that the dog isn't barking, and decides that the only person the dog didn't bark at besides Mos Def is Nick. I doubt that's true, and it certainly doesn't seem logical (why is Nick so special compared to the other converts?), but I don't have the energy to contest it. Which has been the show's MO for a good long time, I feel I must at least add. Not to mention the fact that regardless of the identity of the assailant, you'd think LOUD GUNSHOTS EMPTIED INTO HIS MASTER would be enough to get at least a yip from the stupid thing. I mean, as a guard dog, he could not be more fired.
As that girl continues to moan and gasp in pain in the background, Colin Hanks drains a not-insignificant amount of his own blood into a Mason jar, which is always a sterile environment I'm sure, and puts it in the refrigerator with several similar jars before removing a paper bag and some Oscar Meyer? I'm starting to wonder about Colin Hanks's mental age here. He brings a sandwich and a bottle of water to the girl and apologizes as he tells her the professor forbade any painkillers, but she skips over that topic and begs him to let her go, adding that she has a son who needs his mother. This looks like it hits Colin Hanks where he lives, but despite his pause, he leaves her, not even removing the cap in her bottled water, which given that she has a BROKEN ARM is cold.













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