when she went to sleep? You must have had a chance then.â
âShe lets the dog sleep with her. Poor bloody thing. What with her and all the Irish music it has to listen to, you canât blame it for being a vicious bastard. So there was no chance. I tried a few times, when I could hear her snoring, but as soon as I made a move, the dog would do this low growling bit and Iâd have to stay dead still. I tell you, standing still for near on nine hours is not something I want to do again in a hurry.â
âPoor Kiffo. It does sound appalling. So how come you got out when you did? Donât tell me she gets up at 5.00 a.m. to go for a ten k run?â
Kiffo brightened.
âItâs sorta weird, Calma. Get this. At four-forty-something the phone rings. I damn near crapped myself. Iâd kinda fallen asleep on my feet by then and I thought it was a police siren. The cocky in my trousers started jumping about. Like that Irish idiot. So, Iâm wide awake and I can hear the Pitbull talking. Sheâs really tired, her voice all grumpy at being woken up. âWho the hell is it?â she says, or something like that. And then thereâs this long silence and then she says, âWhat, now? Itâs nearly five in the morning. Canât it wait?â More silence. And then she says, âLet Ravioli deal with it.ââ â
âSheâs talking about pasta at five in the morning?â
âWhat?â
âYou said âravioliâ. â
âWell, it was something like that. Some Italian name. Thereâs more silence and then she says, âAll right. Iâll be there in fifteen minutes. Donât let him get away from you this time, or youâre dead.â Something along those lines anyway. So she gets up and leaves the house, taking the bloody dog with her. What is all that about, Calma? I mean, who gets up at five in the morning for secret meetings and what does she mean about not getting away and, âor youâre deadâ?â
âIâve no idea, Kiffo. Business, maybe.â
Kiffo snorted.
âBusiness? Sheâs a teacher, Calma. What business is she doing at five on a Saturday morning? Comparing exercise books? No, sheâs up to something. You didnât hear her. She sounded really mean on the phone, like whoever she was going to see was going to regret it. Like, major.â
âShe always sounds mean.â
âNot like this. This was serious.â
âSo what do you reckon it was?â
Kiffo leaned towards me conspiratorially and lowered his voice. Not that he needed to. There was no one awake within a ten kilometre radius.
âI reckon sheâs a member of the Mafia.â
I shook my head firmly.
âKiffo. As you pointed out just now, sheâs an English teacher in a high school. Just how many Mafia members do you think take on second jobs in the education department? âThis Mafia business doesnât seem to be paying very well. I think Iâll get a teaching job to enhance my superannuation.â Come on. I mean, thereâd be opportunities for drug supplying, I guess, but itâs not like sheâs operating a numbers racket on the oval or offering the canteen protection.â
âWell, I dunno, do I? But Iâm going to find out.â
âKiffo, give it a break. We both had a horrible night last night.â I decided that I wouldnât tell him about my protestations of undying love to Miss Payne. Kiffoâs not the kind of person to take the charitable view. Heâd give me heaps if he knew. âLetâs just cut our losses. Anyway, youâve trashed her place now, so thatâs it, isnât it? Revenge accomplished.â
A look of sheepishness passed over Kiffoâs face.
âYou did do it, didnât you, Kiffo?â I said. âI mean, thatâs why you went there. Thatâs why you spent hours in her walk-in robe. So you could trash her place
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