‘And the second attack? Staring eyes, look of horror?’
‘Baffling, wasn’t it?’ George grinned. ‘I only meant to scare him. He was threatening to confess all.’
‘Then the Gräfin is in with you,’ I said.
‘It’s not fair,’ Tony said wildly. ‘Everybody’s guilty. There’s only supposed to be one criminal. What about Miss Burton?’
‘She is innocent, if that consoles you any. Arrogant, stupid, and innocent.’
‘Nolan, don’t you see you’re being used?’ Tony demanded. ‘That old bitch is in the clear. She’ll end up with the shrine, after you’ve killed Irma, and you’ll end up in the chair, or whatever they use in this country. You’re a stooge, buddy; a lousy cat’s-paw.’
For the first, and last time in his life, he hit George where it hurt. The big white grin disappeared. George took a step forward, almost stumbling ovet Irma, and Tony braced himself. I got ready to jump. Then I saw two things.
One was a hand, whose whitened fingers were curled gruesomely over the edge of the topmost step. The other was Irma’s eyes – wide open.
‘No,’ I said hysterically. ‘No, don’t! Don’t kill us!’ I threw myself onto my knees, yelped as the gritty stone bit into my lacerated skin, and wriggled gracefully forwards until my body was between George and the stairwell.
It was no use. George’s gun stayed smack on Tony’s liver, and Blankenhagen followed his hand out onto the roof.
He looked like death walking – tattered, bloody, smeared with dust and cobwebs. He was an automaton, moving by pure will. It was so awful it was fascinating; I half expected to see him walk stiff-legged into a hail of bullets, like the monster out of Frankenstein.
Everybody has his limits, though, and Blankenhagen reached his. He fell to his knees, his eyes crossed and his mouth half open.
‘What do I have to do, use a meat cleaver?’ George demanded irritably. ‘All right; you’ll be out of your misery in just a few seconds.’
I didn’t see exactly what happened. My eyes, like those of the others, were fixed on Blankenhagen. I saw enough, though, to keep my dreams uneasy for some time to come. Suddenly Irma was up on her hands and knees. George’s arms were in the air, flailing frantically. I’ll never forget the expression on his face. The sudden change from triumph to failure, and his awareness of it, were blended with the most ghastly terror. For a moment he tottered on the edge of oblivion. Then he was gone. His scream came up like a shriek of anguish from some bodiless ghost borne through the air by the scudding clouds. It ended in another sound. Then there was silence.
I looked at Irma. She had risen to one knee. Her arm was lifted in the gesture that had just sent a man to a messy death. Her black hair was whipped about her face by the wind, and her eyes were enormous.
‘Well,’ said Tony weakly, ‘well, well, well . . .’
He might have gone on like that indefinitely if Irma had not interrupted.
‘He would have killed you,’ she cried, gesturing from Tony to the prostrate form of the doctor. ‘Should I lie still and see him kill you?’
She didn’t mention me. I was in no position to complain; I don’t mind having my life saved as an afterthought.
I cleared my throat. Nobody looked at me. Irma had decided the doctor was the more pathetic of her two heroes, and had taken his bloody head onto her lap. She was crooning over him, and I thought I detected a slight smirk on his face. One of his eyes was open; when he saw me staring, it quickly closed. Tony was trying to look pitiful too, but he couldn’t match Blankenhagen’s performance.
‘Somebody should go for help,’ I said. ‘Hey, Tony – ’
‘Aber nicht!’ Irma gave me a cold look. ‘He cannot go, he is bleeding, in pain – near death, in saving our lives. Run! Go at once!’
‘Run?’ I said. ‘Me?’
Tony moaned and let his head fall back against the parapet.
‘You creep,’ I said to him. I looked at Blankenhagen. ‘The same to you,’ I said. With great dignity I crawled to the stairs and started down them.
I covered about half the distance to the Schloss before my legs gave out. Shivering with shock and reaction, I squatted in a patch of nettles and let my mind wander.
The outlines of the castle wall wavered like fog in front of my half-closed eyes. I was sick. I was thirsty. I was all covered with dirt, and nobody loved me.
After a while my head cleared a little, and I tried to think. Maybe I should go directly to the police. The idea made me giggle wildly. They would take one look at me and send for a doctor. Meanwhile the Gräfin would be on the loose. What if she took a notion to go out and see how George was coming along with his murder? Tony’s groans weren’t altogether phony, he wasn’t in shape to fight anybody, and the Gräfin had always scared the hell out of him. She wouldn’t have to shoot him; she would just stare at him. He would shrivel up and blow away. So would I, if I ran into the old lady now. She could demolish me with a breath.
‘What I need,’ I said aloud, ‘is an army. Right now.’
Then I remembered a fact out of a past that seemed years away. I hauled myself to my feet and headed for the front door of the castle.
My entrance was public, and as spectacular as any ham actress could have prayed for. In the hall I met one of the blond waitresses on her way to the lounge with a big tray of steins. I grimaced into her horrified face and went on my way, hearing the crash of glassware behind me. In the lounge was the group I had hoped to see – the university kids, brimming over with beer and song and youthful joie de vivre. I was incapable of counting them, but the general effect was just what I wanted.
‘Guten Abend,’ I said politely and saw four . . . eight . . . sixteen – good heavens, how many were there? – all those eyes focus in glazed stares. I’m sure they expected me to bend over and extract a knife from my stocking. Only I wasn’t wearing stockings.
‘There has been an accident,’ I said, in my best German. ‘We must have the police. And a doctor. And on the top of the keep, behind this place, you will find several people who need to be transported to the Schloss. And – could I have a drink?’
I fell flat on my face, but they wouldn’t let me pass out; dozens of enthusiastic arms bore me to a couch and another arm poured the dregs of a glass of beer down my throat. I lapped it up like a dog, and somebody brought a full glass, and somebody else held my head . . . I have some unpleasant memories about my sojourn at the Schloss, but the heavenly coldness of that beer trickling down my dusty gullet compensated for all of them.
I shouldn’t have had it, though; on an empty stomach it was almost disastrous. After a while I found myself lying flat on the couch with my head floating up somewhere near the ceiling and a handsome tanned boy bending over me with a glass of brandy.
‘Oy,’ I said, pushing it away. ‘That I don’t need. Will you please – ’
‘I am a student of medicine,’ said the boy grandly. ‘Rest quietly, Fräulein, all has been done as you directed. But what in God’s name has happened?’