"Hasn't there been enough violence here already?!"
"My thoughts precisely, my lady?" The Gentleman answered pleasantly. "I bear no ill will against the boy, although I suppose for someone of my profession, that statement is of limited value... He is my insurance, nothing more, against my esteemed friends here." The Gentleman pointed him gun once more at Lilith and Florian.
"If you hurt the boy, I swear..."
"Oh I'm sure that there are a thousand ideas of how to send me to my messy and undignified demise tumbling through your head as we speak." he interrupted, half smiling and with an insolent sparkle in his eye. "If it comes to it, I'll be a good sport and give you a second's head start to think of a few more. However, whether or not we can avoid such pointless butchery is entirely in your hands, dearest Lilith."
Fastidious in his work as he was, The Gentleman could never be accused of being humourless in his pursuit of perfection. He was nothing if not a man who could see the funny side of any given situation; and right now, watching Lilith's face as the cogs of reason struggled to turn as they froze up with her fear, was more than enough to raise a wry chuckle from him.
"My demands are thus: I want safe passage from this train onto the Iron Maiden; I want a private audience with Captain Monroe; A promise that no harm will come to me, nor any of my possessions, by you or any other member of the crew, from this moment forward until I choose to depart from the Iron Maiden, a time that will be of my choosing and mine alone; and another promise, that once I am gone no member of the crew shall make any attempt to pursue me. Your solemn oath, on your honor as a brigand, murderer and gambler will suffice, as I can hope for nothing better. Mind you, it's fortunate you brought a man of God with you to act as witness, wouldn't you say?
If you refuse to agree with so much as a clause of these terms, or if they are at any point broken later down the line, the boy will die. Even then, I assure you his demise will be much more pleasant than the one I'm sure you'd have lined up for me afterwards. However, I wouldn't treat this offer rashly if I were you. For you see, if he dies, the guilt is on you for breaching the terms of the contract, just as much as it is on me. I may not be a part of the crew, Casino, but I have known your Captain a great deal longer than you have; and I assure you, whatever horrors you may have in store for me will be sweet, sweet mercy compared to what she will do the the person who let her son die on her watch."