Hayley stopped for a bit, taken by surprise by Nigel's sudden change of heart. She began to laugh, a laughter of cynicism and utter contempt. "Us? Friends? Come on, you know better than that," she replied and turned to Nigel again, this time with a dark grin on her face. "So you're basically saying you're letting me live because I make a convenient, once-off buddy for your sister and then you'd dispose of me and Isaac like trash the moment your master says so. At least you're honest and you have your priorities straight, I'd give you that much." The blonde postponed her plan to return home and, against the warnings of the 'other her', closed the distance between her and Nigel, not close enough to invade his personal space, but close enough for either of them to strike.
"I came to notice something today," she said to him in an abruptly calm tone. "Y'know how people say all this old shit about not judging a book by its cover? Between seeing you not killing anyone and interacting with your sister, I came to realize that my view of you maybe wrong, if not slightly so. Your sister adores you and you didn't mangle me on the spot with her around. I don't need a PhD to figure out what it means. About her, I'm no genius, but I can tell than Sarah's been through hell and back. I'm not going to delve into that; it ain't my business. She's a nice girl and she doesn't need any more problems to deal with."
Pausing for a bit to let her words sink in, she continued, still with the same calm voice, "I also came to see a few similarities between the two of us. We're perfectly willing to do whatever it takes to accomplish our goals, be it through diplomacy or force. We're dedicated to what we believe in and we're both capable of caring for others, but that's where our similarities end."
Seemingly satisfied, the blonde finally gave him his lost space back and walked home, leaving Nigel with cold, blunt parting words.
"Unlike you, however, I still have standards."