[center][h2][b][color=silver]Lhirinthyl[/color][/b][/h2][/center][hr] A gauntleted hand came down on his shoulder, his attention snapped over to its origin, arcane words on the tip of his tongue, magic at his fingertips, then he registered words and his reason took hold. Perhaps Irah might notice the implication of his poised fingers at his side and the way his lips parted, tongue [i]almost[/i] moving, but most likely it would be impossible to read, especially as briefly as it was present. Nodding in response to sir Yanin's words, the deigan turned his gaze back to the room. Raking his eyes across the scene even as he reached out with his arcane senses to attempt to ascertain if there were any other details that the others may have missed. While he waited for his mind to process anything from those senses, Lhirinthyl noticed something else entirely...something far more mundane--though its source was divine in nature. With his eyes locking on the once-thalk, 'Caleb,' Lhirin tilted his head, his wide eyes narrowing fractionally. He said nothing for a time, as others were speaking, instead he simply let his mind roil on the waves of euphoria and power that the piaan had provided him. Then three was a flash of silver movement. Lhirin's reaction was immediate, his hands raising slightly, only to lower as he processed what Freagon had done. Shaking his head, Lhirin let out a small set of noises 'tsk tsk,' in response. Even he knew better than to do something so brash and thoughtless. The irony of his thought was lost in him, of course and he was glad to see that the knight's actions did not resolve in further hostilities or the like. As things calmed slightly, with Yanin and Irah essentially chastising the nightwalker, Lhirin circled back to his earlier thought and spoke up--his silver-eyed gaze falling once more on Caleb. [color=silver][b]"Why do you appear so frightened?"[/b][/color] He asked, his heading tilting faintly, his tone curious even as his piercing gaze tried to ascertain the reason through the divine's body language alone.