The blow lands with an added look of pleasant surprise on Thezra's face, her recognition of the anger fueling that last strike forcing a tiny hint of a smile to curl around her lips. Nonetheless, she couldn't help but shake her head trying to replay his maneuver again. The way he constantly drew her into one attack only to swing with another. And here she was just throwing heavy blow after heavy blow against him fruitlessly. "I do not look down on you all," she sighs, lowering her weapon to her side and settling into a more relaxed stance, "except for physically, I suppose. But look down? That implies I don't respect this group; their abilities. Before I met you all, sure. When I saw you on that field standing against Gûg's raiding party, I had little faith gubuk - outsiders - could hold their own against Duar'ken's forces. But that was stupid of me. Naive. I was taught early that to underestimate one's enemy was to blindfold oneself in battle. So look down on? The opposite," she shakes her head, "Katrin is a powerful - if overly quick to anger - warrior who fights for her loved ones and own sense of what is right. The girl, Lilliana possesses magics I've never heard of, and though she feigns helplessness and maybe lacks the kind of combat experience you have, can wield them with precision. The wizard is weak, but his magic messes with the mind in a way no sword can defend against. And Ascian..." she frowns, pursing her lips. "Admittedly, I thought I had a better understanding of him before last night. In battle he's incredible with that bow, and outside of it I figured he had some issues as does anyone, which I was prepared to help with. Now it seems more like his demons are more literal than even my own, and mine tried to kill us twice," she laughs, rubbing the back of her head uneasily at the thought. "And you, my friend , are the most capable of them all. You have not just the training most of them lack, but you've had it tested in the fire and flame of battle and come out the other side. And I trust that's true not just because you talk about it but because you fight like it. It's why even that last attack failed to get through," she wipes a finger through the smattering of blood dripping down her abdomen, running it up over the bridge of her nose. "You want to know why I dislike your obsession with gold and glory so much?" She asks with a frown, the frustration growing on her face, " It's because it goes against everything that makes a community work. Gold is fine . It's an end to a means. But its the means that matters." She paces around him, lowering the weapon into a more readied stance while she continues, " Katrin asked me once how I could call the people of the Fireblade community weak. But that is what they are . If you or I challenged a farmer there to a duel, they would die. Why is it an insult to point that out? It's just fact. It's also fact that if they challenged me to work the fields I would fail, because I know nothing of planting seeds or tilling fields. In that way, I am weak. And in that way, everyone has a role they can and should fulfill with skills they have that others don't. The farmer grows crops so those that can't can eat. They are doing it not for the glory or the pay, though those may come with their success, but for the community. In the same way, a warrior fights for those that can't. Not for glory or money, but to protect and defend. Her thoughts rush once more to Grum'rusch, and the pain of those early raids returns once more. "When Duar'ken used his raids to steal and destroy, he betrayed that. He turned protectors into pillagers and in an effort to take means we hadn't grown. And he turned his back on the very hunters and farmers that could have gotten us out of the famine. So I opposed him. That's it, alright? I have no 'lofty' goal. I have nothing high and mighty. I have only my people." Her gaze falls. "And they cast me out." She takes a moment to breathe in deep. Yes, Kerak had seemingly seemed willing to accept her, but he was not the sole voice of the tribe, and many of those voices had been quite... loud. "Anyway I told you already, I will "do my shit"," she says, in a strange approximation of his own accent and words from the other night, "and you can do yours. I will not object to it for as long as we work together." Looking up to the dragonborn, she raises an eyebrow as his own words replay in her mind, "What do you mean the gods weren't kind."