“Oh yes, you are, George,” Sydney said, wandering across the room. “You don’t have to load it. Crispin will fall apart just to see the gun. I’m not suggesting you kill him. I don’t like murder myself. Feel like getting the gun now?”
Again George was going to refuse, when he suddenly thought of the blond man’s sneering smile He thought of the two Greeks creeping towards him with their razors. With the Luger in his hands, they would have been terrified. A smouldering anger—something he had never before experienced—urged him to seek revenge. Cora’s shrieks still rang in his ears.
He got to his feet. “All right,” he said, “but I’m not loading the gun.”
“I’ll come with you,” Sydney said. “Come and talk to me while I dress.”
George followed him into a tiny bedroom.
“Who is this Crispin?” he asked, leaning against the wall.
“I used to fool around with him,” Sydney returned, slipping his blue shirt over his head. “Keep this under your hat. He knocks off cars in a big way. There’s bags of money in that game.” He glanced quickly at George and went on, “I chucked it after a hit. Got too hot for me. Cora hates the guy. He doesn’t know she’s my sister. He’ll have a surprise when he sees me—and you.” He was dressed now. “You’d better have a wash. Those cuts on your face aren’t deep, but you look a bit of a mess. Those Greeks know how to use a razor all right.”
He took George into the grubby little bathroom. George stared at himself in the mirror. A long strip of plaster ran down the side of his face, and another strip was above his ear. He rinsed his face, getting rid of the blood smears. There was blood, too, on his coat and collar.
“I look a sight,” he said, suddenly secretly proud of himself. He looked tough and frightening: a real gangster.
“I’ll find you a scarf,” Sydney said. “You can change when you get to your place.”