In the end, it was all more of a surprise to Noah Herst than it was to anyone else. Sure, the burly fellows here were put off by Eld turning one of their comrades into a rag-doll, but they didn't know the kid. Noah did. He knew that the last time he saw Eld, he wasn't able to do something like that. Under these circumstances, though, it was a pleasant surprise. Now at the very least, he no longer had to worry about Eld getting his face clobbered in. In fact, he might have even been able to depend on him a little bit . . . assuming he had the physical clout to deal with the threat from below:
The burly man that'd been thrown down didn't just decide to get back up, he decided to do it at Eld's expense. He hadn't hit the ground that hard and was far from falling in battle. If Eld didn't pay attention whilst he had his back to the downed man, he'd feel a sharp pain behind his knee, one powerful enough to knock Eld down. The man was outright trying to punch Eld in the knee-- and assuming he was able to, he'd go so far as to stand up, get Eld in a rear choke hold, and confine him there 'til he was out of fighting condition.
Noah could only devote so much attention to Eld's problem, though. If he was in a bind he couldn't get out of, Noah could probably help out, but he had to get around the "leader" of this troupe, first . . .