Lizard Fighter shook his head as the Archer yelled after the boars before he returned his attention to the Druid Girl. [color=red]"Having free meat is better than paying for it, and the hides could have been useful. Never mind the Experience boost we could have gotten from them."[/color] He replied while working. Another heave and another corpse was put up on the high ground for the girls. Both of who thanked him for the unspoken idea. Although the Druid Girl had to make a little nickname for him. He didn't react to their thanks, nor the nickname. His ears flicked towards the lone guard who laughed, but other than that made no show that he acknowledged anything while he single-mindedly slung corpses up. He continued like this for hours, slogging his way along and leaving behind dull bloodstained and grimy dirt. They weren't paid to repair the palisade so he left the blunted spikes or broken ones, be. He didn't need to break any of them, just ripping the large corpses into pieces with flexes of those thickly muscled arms. Soon, via small time skip, the sky turned to the colors of a sunset. The guard spoke up, congratulating them on a job well done. This was what finally got the lizard to climb up and out of the ditch. Any patches of him that hadn't been red were now from blood. He flicked a chunk of entrails off his shoulder before he was handed a piece of parchment that indicated that they completed the job and got payment. The girls talked about rinsing off. [color=red]"A stream will do, we don't have a lot of money to spend on something as luxurious as a hot bath.[/color] He said as he tucked the piece of paper into his bag. He pulled a rag out, it had seen better days, and wiped a portion of the blood and gunk from his body before it dried. That poor piece of cloth was stained deep red with tints of green and was launched into the pyre. It had seen its final use and discarded. [color=red]"So a rinse, turn in the paper, potentially do a second job if everyone is willing?"[/color] He questioned to confirm what they would be doing. The group honestly hadn't even decided to be a party, they just did one job together.