Finley was still cringing from the burn that had quite ironically both increased the severity of his pain and perhaps saved his life. He dipped his leg in for a short while, closing his eyes as the pain slowly changed from being an unbearable sharp jab to a constant irritating pulse - something that was a problem, but a problem he could live with. He tore part of this shirt arm off and wrapped it around his leg, eliminating any chance of infection that had already been significantly lowered thanks to the girls burn. He glanced around at the people around him - they were talking now, some of them.
The girl that had helped with his leg was the first to find the courage to speak out towards the whole group, putting out the blatant but very relevant question of: 'what now?'. Finley wasn't entirely sure, and he wasn't the type who could make wise decisions in stressful times, he'd need to think it over, so he did not reply right away. The absence of sound was quickly filled by another person, who quickly announced himself as 'Keith'. Keith seemed very level headed for such a situation, and was clearly making a perhaps futile attempt at organising the chaos around him.
The silence hung for a few seconds, clearly a moment for the group to ponder on. Finley decided that he would now put his view forth.
"I don't know about you, but I don't feel safe here," Finley sighed, paranoia forcing him to look over his shoulder to make sure there weren't any guards coming after the group. "We're in the middle of nowhere and we are at risk of being ambushed. Do you think we'd be safe in the city right now? 'cus I don't." He slowly stood up, eager not to damage his leg. "I say we stay out here until we can decide what to do in the long run... Get away from this wreckage and make our way deeper in to the woods." Finley ruffled his hair as he played with the idea of returning home and using the crowds to hide himself, but he came to the conclusion that he had been caught so easily the first time that he had no chance the second time. "I don't really see an alternative."