[center][b][color=ed1c24]Marius[/color][/b] | [b][color=FAEBD7]Abra[/color][/b][/center] [b]"If I may, if we must split, send cavalry to remove the prisoner. They will get there and back faster. Fighting near the wall, not a quick and dynamic front yet. Not cavalry territory normally."[/b] [color=FAEBD7]“You do realize that what you mean by ‘cavalry’ is only you and that guy named Marius over there, right?”[/color] Abra intruded into the conversation that had just started. [color=FAEBD7]“While I can see that you are quite, um, how should I put this, intense for a healer, would it really make much of a difference if only you went with him?”[/color] There was a small moment of silence after Abra had made her opinion known. She wondered what the others were thinking, that she’s in no position to criticize anyone because Abra herself was the one freaking out about how desentualized they were to war and violence. Once Marius broke the since, Abra was relieved that he would making a response to what the others had said beforehand. [color=ed1c24]“You cannot be too careful on the battlefield. Once you have let your guard down, you are at your most vulnerable. Cannot be too sure about what tricks these men have up their sleeves.”[/color] After Jacob had demanded the remaining ‘Church’ soldiers to surrender and Andre took advantage of the situation by pressing the defenders forward to cut down the remaining invaders, Jacob looked as if he was about ready to blow a gasket. Before he accepted the task of leading the Shepherds back to the caravan, Marius first wanted to get one final word in. [color=ed1c24]“If I say so myself, Sir Jacob, while you might not approve of Master Andre’s tactics, this is probably not the time and place to confront him about his wartime decisions. Would it not be better to do so in private after the battle has finally reached its conclusion? This is just my advice as a third party. Take it or leave it.”[/color] Marius then turned Bucephalus around in order to lead the remaining Shepherds back in order to get everyone regrouped and rested before they had to reenter the fray, if such actions were even necessary.