@variations : WHAT KIND OF PERSON DOES THIS MAKE ME ?
maybe you're avoiding the subject, but it's hard not to look at flint before you, this great man, asking for your counsel, and think of how far you've come. since you were a thief pulling off this last great score, cocky and overconfident, and ending up on your knees with james flint's gun in your mouth, thinking, well, that's it because how is there a way out, always a way out, if you can't even speak? and how you'd saved your own life afterwards, that silver tongue tasting of gunpowder and metal, talk-talk-talking your way into a job and out of a shallow grave that, let's be honest, they'd probably have made you dig yourself.
what kind of person does this make me, and it's the last thing you'd expect of him, the last question you'd expect him to ask you, and that's when you realize -- oh. he cares what they think of him, this poor man. stories are nothing, stories are what you use to twist your way out of trouble, time and time again, and yet here he is, caring about the stories being told. the ones that make him a monster, a menace, a threat to decent men and women everywhere. that must be it, the source of that worry. what else could it be? certainly not something so juvenile as conscience.
you don't say, this time, it must be awful being you. you say instead, "it seems rather late for second thoughts," say, "we are in a war, after all." war. ha. what would you know about it, draft-dodger, and yet that's what flint calls his disputes with other bootleggers; and it's true that his men attend to him with the blind loyalty of the soldier. most of them, anyway, the poor fools. not you. never you, if you can help it.