[h3][color=a2d39c][b][center]Ntaj Zoov Yaaj[/center][/b][/color][/h3] [Center][color=a2d39c][b]Location: [/b][/color] In the cave [color=a2d39c][b]Actions: [/b][/color]Looking for the chief[/center] Deeper and deeper into the cave and Ntaj continued to feel uneasy. He understood that all the dangers were just in his head and that this cave was probably structurally safe, but he still worried that this cave could fall on his head at any moment. But Ntaj tried to put his paranoia aside, looking towards some of the orcs who were dwelling in this cave. He wasn't sure if they were already here when the fighting happened or somehow came in to protect their chief. Now that he thought about it, there may be more than one entrance into this cave that Ntaj didn't know about. That could be either a good or a bad thing depending on what happened to the chief. And speaking of the chief, Ntaj and Cyneburg still haven't found him yet. Wanting to be out of this cave as fast as he could without looking like he's fleeing, Ntaj asked a few orcs who would bother paying attention to him. [color=a2d39c]"Where is chief? Qhov twg yog thawj"[/color] He asked in both common and orcish. When he did so Ntaj made himself look more imposing, his chest out and looking directly at the orcs. While he generally skipped the lessons about leading others back as a child, he was no stranger to making demands to servants, and simply regressed back to those times. While it may be dangerous for him to assume he has any authority over these orcs, Ntaj had too much pride in himself to act like a stooge to anyone that wasn't the chief. And even the chief would be, in Ntaj's mind, his equal.