It was not a war cry, at least not one the lowly man seemed familiar with, but it undoubtedly was a call to alarm for some sort.
The orcish bellow, so loud as it was, spurred the tall robed man across the wooden counter with a surprising amount of dexterous spring; for his size and what he found himself clothed in the motion was fluid and he did not prove to slow even for a moment as he disappeared through the frame and into the back of the dwarven woman's smithy.
There was no doubt in the mind of the man, his palm calmly setting the raw, rough silver ore atop the others in an audible clack, that there was trouble afoot; the mysterious wagon had all but vanished no less, although truthfully having been moved not far. All that had
felt off was indeed off, just as instinct and insight suggested - these events were likely related, somehow and for some reason. Whatever it was, it drove the man to approach a situation he seemed ill prepared for.
After all, what good was a ragged unarmed commoner in the fray of armed cutthroats and blades?
Stepping through the threshold, he came to witness a brutish orc - covered in some soot from his place of work - crash to the ground and the head of his formerly fine mace clatter across the stonework floor while the man from earlier recovering from an apparent knee charge. Another two, armed thugs as it seemed, brandished blades and idled at the ready. They, along with the orc and the robed, staff bearing man, noted another approaching from the alleyway beside the blacksmith.
Green glare moving from the defenders to the attackers, the commoner brought up his dusted hands and shifted slightly to the edge of the doorway leading to the shopfront, barring a smooth approach. Initially the gesture, of but a meek man with hands raised as if to fight other armed men, would be laughable, but his positioning and grit to his rising focus seemed unnerving; one hand by his side beginning to move in a roiling manner, digits wavering in air, flexing.
Either the commoner was bluffing magical talent or the commoner was not truly a commoner at all...
@Shade@Gentlemanvaultboy