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Somebody called outside the window, “Fraulein Schmidt.”

She said, “They don’t like one to stay too long. It uses up their electricity.”

He had given up the idea of sparing her anything. He told her, “The police say they were going to arrest Harry. They’d pinned some racket on him.”

She took the news in much the same way as Kurtz. “Everybody’s in a racket.”

“I don’t believe he was in anything serious.”

“No.”

“But he may have been framed. Do you know a man called Kurtz?”

“I don’t think so.”

“He wears a toupee.”

“Oh.” He could tell that that struck home. He said, “Don’t you think it was odd they were all there-at the death? Everybody knew Harry. Even the driver, the doctor…”

She said with hopeless calm, “I’ve thought that too, though I didn’t know about Kurtz. I wondered whether they’d murdered him, but what’s the use of wondering?”

“I’m going to get those bastards,” Rollo Martins said.

“It won’t do any good. Perhaps the police are right. Perhaps poor Harry got mixed up…”

“Fraulein Schmidt,” the voice called again.

“I must go.”

“I’ll walk with you a bit of the way.”

The dark was almost down: the snow had ceased for a while to falclass="underline" and the great statues of the Ring, the prancing horses, the chariots and the eagles, were gunshot grey with the end of evening light. “It’s better to give up and forget,” Anna said. The moony snow lay ankle deep on the unswept pavements.

“Will you give me the doctor’s address?”

They stood in the shelter of a wall while she wrote it down for him.

“And yours too?”

“Why do you want that?”

“I might have news for you.”

“There isn’t any news that would do any good now.” He watched her from a distance board her tram, bowing her head against the wind, a little dark question mark on the snow.

AN AMATEUR detective has this advantage over the professional, that he doesn’t work set hours. Rollo Martins was not confined to the eight hour day: his investigations didn’t have to pause for meals. In his one day he covered as much ground as one of my men would have covered in two, and he had this initial advantage over us, that he was Harry’s friend. He was, as it were, working from inside, while we pecked at the perimeter.

Dr. Winkler was at home. Perhaps he would not have been at home to a police officer. Again Martins had marked his card with the sesame phrase: “A friend of Harry Lime’s.”

Dr. Winkler’s waiting room reminded Martins of an antique shop-an antique shop that specialized in religious objets d’art. There were more crucifixes than he could count, none of later date probably than the seventeenth century. There were statues in wood and ivory. There were a number of reliquaries: little bits of bone marked with saints’ names and set in oval frames on a background of tin foil. If they were genuine, what an odd fate it was, Martins thought, for a portion of Saint Susanna’s knuckle to come to rest in Doctor Winkler’s waiting room. Even the high-backed hideous chairs looked as if they had once been sat in by cardinals. The room was stuffy, and one expected the smell of incense. In a small gold casket was a splinter of the True Cross. A sneeze disturbed him.

Dr. Winkler was the cleanest doctor Martins had ever seen. He was very small and neat, in a black tail coat and a high stiff collar; his little black moustache was like an evening tie. He sneezed again: perhaps he was cold because he was so clean. He said “Mr Martins?”

An irresistible desire to sully Dr. Winkler assailed Rollo Martins. He said, “Dr. Winkle?”

“Dr. Winkler.”

“You’ve got an interesting collection here.”

Yes.

“These saints’ bones…”

“The bones of chickens and rabbits.” Dr. Winkler took a large white handkerchief out of his sleeve rather as though he were a conjurer producing his country’s flag, and blew his nose neatly and thoroughly twice, closing each nostril in turn. You expected him to throw away the handkerchief after one use. “Would you mind, Mr Martins, telling me the purpose of your visit? I have a patient waiting.”

“We were both friends of Harry Lime.”

“I was his medical adviser,” Dr. Winkler corrected him and waited obstinately between the crucifixes.

“I arrived too late for the inquest. Harry had invited me out here to help him in something. I don’t quite know what. I didn’t hear of his death till I arrived.”

“Very sad,” Dr. Winkler said.

“Naturally, under the circumstances, I want to hear all I can.”

“There is nothing I can tell you that you don’t know. He was knocked over by a car. He was dead when I arrived.”

“Would he have been conscious at all?”

“I understand he was for a short time, while they carried him into the house.”

“In great pain?”

“Not necessarily.”

“You are quite certain that it was an accident?”

Dr. Winkler put out a hand and straightened a crucifix. “I was not there. My opinion is limited to the cause of death. Have you any reason to be dissatisfied?”

The amateur has another advantage over the professionaclass="underline" he can be reckless. He can tell unnecessary truths and propound wild theories. Martins said, “The police had implicated Harry in a very serious racket. It seemed to me that he might have been murdered-or even killed himself.”

“I am not competent to pass an opinion,” Dr. Winkler said.

“Do you know a man called Cooler?”

“I don’t think so.”

“He was there when Harry was killed.”

“Then of course I have met him. He wears a toupee.”

“That was Kurtz.”

Dr. Winkler was not only the cleanest, he was also the most cautious doctor that Martins had ever met. His statements were so limited that you could not for a moment doubt their veracity. He said, “There was a second man there.” If he had to diagnose a case of scarlet fever he would, you felt, have confined himself to a statement that a rash was visible, that the temperature was so and so. He would never find himself in error at an inquest.

“Had you been Harry’s doctor for long?” He seemed an odd man for Harry to choose-Harry who liked men with a certain recklessness, men capable of making mistakes.

“For about a year.”

“Well, it’s good of you to have seen me.” Dr. Winkler bowed. When he bowed there was a very slight creak as though his shirt were made of celluloid. “I mustn’t keep you from your patients any longer.” Turning away from Dr. Winkler he confronted yet another crucifix, the figure hanging with arms above the head: a face of elongated El Greco agony. “That’s a strange crucifix,” he said.

“Jansenist,” Dr. Winkler commented and closed his mouth sharply as though he had been guilty of giving away too much information.

“Never heard the word. Why are the arms above the head?”

Dr. Winkler said reluctantly, “Because he died, in their view, only for the elect.”

AS I SEE IT, turning over my files, the notes of conversations, the statements of various characters, it would have been still possible, at this moment, for Rollo Martins to have left Vienna safely. He had shown an unhealthy curiosity, but the disease had been checked at every point. Nobody had given anything away. The smooth wall of deception had as yet shown no real crack to his roaming fingers. When Rollo Martins left Dr. Winkler’s he was in no danger. He could have gone home to bed at Sacher’s and slept with a quiet mind. He could even have visited Cooler at this stage without trouble. No one was seriously disturbed. Unfortunately for him-and there would always be periods of his life when he bitterly regretted it-he chose to go back to Harry’s flat. He wanted to talk to the little vexed man who said he had seen the accident-or had he really not said as much? There was a moment in the dark frozen street, when he was inclined to go straight to Cooler, to complete his picture of those sinister birds who sat around Harry’s body, but Rollo, being Rollo, decided to toss a coin and the coin fell for the other action, and the deaths of two men.