But Gil had been kind, without any incentive or requirement to be. While Nightingale's initial reaction had been plenty to trigger Duck's panic, it was totally at odds with how she was behaving now, and the strong reminder of Gilligan was helping to slowly persuade Duck that her fleeting aggression had not been properly representative of her nature.
He still wanted her to stay on the opposite bank though. Just in case.
Perhaps due to this association, Duck managed to view her laughter as more delirious than offensive, though it did prickle at his skin that his name would encourage such a reaction anyway - her jest was uncomfortably familiar, his name a source of regular amusement and he hated it. Nightingale also spotted their shared quality, but at least did not go so far as to point out the vast difference in their namesakes. Stuck in a weird state of quite uncomfortable and yet desperately wanting to overcome it, Duck watched her warily, wondering if maybe she was just a little bit... unstable. And that was a little bit terrifying all by itself. He shouldn't have come out here and he shouldn't have bothered her. The mistakes were just piling up.
"Sh-sh-sure," he said carefully, not really sure at all but maybe it was safer to just go along with it. Hopefully this wouldn't just be another mistake to add to the pile. And then there he stood, not moving a muscle except to ensure that his eyes stayed glued to her, waiting for her to make her first move. It was like a game of chess where he was one moment away from tipping over the board and running away shrieking.