Thank-you for reading this Nikita.
I am revising the piece, taking into account your comments and those of ladyc. Some I find hard to make, as I don't really agree , but am prepared to accept; others were particularly helpful. Thanks.
A few I have rejected, on grounds of style or lingusitic differences (British English v American English).
I assume red text replaces blue.
As noted above, this piece is adapted from the film The Third Man . I have tried to present Anna Schmidt's point of view of the story. A quick summary of the film is: Holly Martins arrives in occupied Vienna to meet his one time best friend, Harry Lime, who now lives there. When he arrives, he is warned to leave by Major Caooloway of the British authorities, who says Lime is a wanted man. Martins decides to visit Lime anyway, but as he reaches hi apartment, he learns that Lime was killed recently by a passing truck. Martins attends the funeral, and notices Anna Schmidt, who, on enquiry, Martins discovers to be Lime's lover. Martins also uncovers a number of inconsistencies in the various accounts of Lime's death, and decides to talk to Anna to get her version - assuming she would know everything. She doesn't know much more than Martins, however, and feels alone in a dangerous and unfriendly city. At about this time, it is discovered she is there on forged papers, and the Russians begin to take an interest in her.
Martins then runs into Lime, as he appears to be trying to contact Anna. Lime eludes Martins without speaking to him. Martins informs the authorities and they discover that Lime has been using Vienna's massive system of sewer tunnels to escape. At this point Calloway shows Martins the dossier of Lime's activities and asks Martins to help trap him. Martins reluctantly agrees provided Calloway helps Anna to get out of Vienna. He has fallen for her big time. She, on the other hand wouldn't even have been able to say if Martins had a moustache or not.
Martins sends a message to Lime asking to meet. They meet on the Reisenrad - the famous big wheel in Vienna's Prater Park where Lime reveals himself to be a heartless and callous racketeer, and makes the famous "cuckoo-clock" speech (see below). Martins decides he has to be stopped and sets up a trap for Lime, with the help of Major Calloway.
Lime is lured into a cafe to meet Martins again, but Anna burst in to warn Lime that it is a trap. Lime escapes and flees down into the sewers, but the police anticipate this and chase him through the tunnels. Martins accompanies them. When Lime is trapped, he shoots a British soldier dead, and Calloway wounds Lime. Martins pursues Lime and traps him. The wounded Lime, unable to escape, nods to Martins, as if to give him permission to kill him. Martins then does so.
As Anna leaves Lime's real funeral, she has to walk down a long avenue in the Zentralfriedhof. This is an important scene in the film, as she completely cuts Martins dead when she walks past him. I have tried to imagine what might have been going on in her head during that long walk.
The passage you praised as "truly dark", men with gangrened legs, women in childbirth ... You can see them now in the mental ward. was a direct quote and I cannot accept your praise.
Other significant quotes and allusions are:
I thought he was just a petty criminal who dabbled in the Black Market, selling boots, stockings, cigarettes, and watches to people who wanted them and had the money to pay.
He had once said that you had to endure the Borgias to have Michelangelo and the Renaissance as well. Without those extremes, there could only be mediocrity. (the actual quote, which is very famous, was: "In Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder, bloodshed — they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.")
I don't know if I was really in love with him, or if I still am. How can you know a thing like that afterwards? I don't know anything more except I want to be dead too.
... if he wanted to sell his services, I wasn’t willing to be the price ...
As this is an adaptation, I do not think I can be accused of plagiarism: they quotations are necessary to link to the original story. You will note I gave an acknowledgement at the end of my story.
I will post my revision ASAP

TYWD