Calix is just shoving a whip into a bedraggled slave's hand when he hears yelling, and turns to it instinctively. Healer . It isn't his forte, but the urge to respond exists all the same – he's just turning to answer the call when sense catches up to him and he pauses, looking instead to the dirty faces and pained bodies around him and knowing his is no different. These slavers may not be the only ones to want to put us in chains. Veering course, he ducks instead into the makeshift square area, sliding through the pandemonium not toward the yelling voice but instead to where he knows the weapons are kept, acutely aware that not only are many still unarmed, but though the warseax in his hand is capable, it isn't right . When he leaves here – and he will , he knows that as well as he knows his name, he has to – it will be with all that they had stolen from him. Honor, dignity, and above all else, his sweord. Throwing a glance to the gate as he runs, Calix's attention snares for a moment on the unfamiliar faces circling what appears to be a grievously-wounded man. From where he stands the call for healing seems an impossible task; if the man isn't dead yet, Calix assumes he soon will be. The help he could have offered seems arbitrary, even if they were known to be friends, so it can't be a sin not to offer, surely. Taking their distraction as a positive, he lets familiar urgency turn him back toward the armory – and nearly misses the glint of silver he'd know across any battlefield, that looks wrong in anyone's hand but his. No. Adjusting his grip on his warseax, he takes an immediate step toward the strangers before pausing, adrenaline coursing so brutally close to the surface it scalds. It's an irrepressible insult to see the hilt held by another, but even Calix has to acknowledge that the man holding it had already dragged in a man far better armored than he. Could he fight him alone? Does it matter? How many friends had he come with? Does it matter? If he created enough chaos to take it unnoticed, would the slaves follow? Does it matter? That same, simple thought again; the only possible answer. No . He takes a second step, and a third, and only blinks back to his greater surroundings when a somewhat-familiar face appears in his path, the noise of the chaos filtering him slowly back to present. Yes, he tries to correct himself with a deep breath, fighting back the coiling, writhing urgency if just for a moment. Yes, this time it has to. Throwing one more look at the unfamiliar figures, he shakes his head and reluctantly leads Egon to the building he'd originally been aiming for. "We seem to keep meeting," he notes, shoving inside the armory. "We need to arm the others before our liberators decide to sell us as well. Do you recognize them?" He pauses, glancing again over Egon's shoulder through the open door and toward the gate. "They have something of mine."