Oh, mattress. That sounds...so much better than anything he could have hoped to sleep on, trekking random deteriorating parts of this city.
But he contains the desire to instantly take Jack up on his oh-so generous offer. Now that the option is real and in front of him, it's not exactly suspicion that he feels, but a couple flags go up out of sheer mental habit.
Sleeping is, well. Letting your guard down in the worst way. And for everything that's happened to them in the past day or so...it's only been a day or so. As much as he would like to and feels like he can trust Jack, passing out and assuming Jack's going to keep attackers at bay, stick around for hours on end...probably unwise. After all, if Jack has any sort of ulterior motive, waiting until Sinclair's asleep would be the perfect plan to put it in motion. Or he might just decide to leave without him.
It's just being rational, it always pays to reevaluate your situation from a business standpoint. That feeling is not a preemptive sense of betrayal at the thought, it's only sensible caution.
But Jack needs him in order to get upstairs. Sinclair's supposed to be telekinesised up and then throw Jack a rope. He can't progress without him. Right?
"Thought you wanted to keep moving? We don't have to stop on my account," he says, trying not to watch Jack too closely. If Jack doesn't have any ulterior motives, Sinclair coming off as suspicious could just as easily form a rift. And that seems equally as unwise.
no subject
But he contains the desire to instantly take Jack up on his oh-so generous offer. Now that the option is real and in front of him, it's not exactly suspicion that he feels, but a couple flags go up out of sheer mental habit.
Sleeping is, well. Letting your guard down in the worst way. And for everything that's happened to them in the past day or so...it's only been a day or so. As much as he would like to and feels like he can trust Jack, passing out and assuming Jack's going to keep attackers at bay, stick around for hours on end...probably unwise. After all, if Jack has any sort of ulterior motive, waiting until Sinclair's asleep would be the perfect plan to put it in motion. Or he might just decide to leave without him.
It's just being rational, it always pays to reevaluate your situation from a business standpoint. That feeling is not a preemptive sense of betrayal at the thought, it's only sensible caution.
But Jack needs him in order to get upstairs. Sinclair's supposed to be telekinesised up and then throw Jack a rope. He can't progress without him. Right?
"Thought you wanted to keep moving? We don't have to stop on my account," he says, trying not to watch Jack too closely. If Jack doesn't have any ulterior motives, Sinclair coming off as suspicious could just as easily form a rift. And that seems equally as unwise.