The Orc seemed to be snapped out of his state of religious ecstasy with a truly livid look of shock on his face. His first interpretation of the guard woman's words was that she was insinuating that his blood was unclean-- a very damning insult to an Orc, especially when one was giving a blood payment. But this look softened as he realized she meant the other bloodshed-- the blood of the soldier.
He remained kneeled by the old man's side as he answered.
"This old man showed me great kindness in the bazaar today," he said, and almost stopped speaking right there. If this had been an Orc stronghold, that explanation would have been enough. But he was not quite so zealous as to be blind that the ways of these people were not the same as his own, and elaborated further. "After he bravely fell in battle, I was honor bound to be sure his death was to be not only an honorable one, but also one of consequence. The woman the soldier attacked was also very frank and direct while speaking to me, so I felt no choice but to act on both her behalf as well."
He looked over to his sacred hammer, Volendrung. Despite being nestled in the crater of what was once a man's head, no blood or somatic matter stuck to it's spiked black surface. It's red eye stared into the crowd of onlookers at a particular group that the Orc could tell by mere spirit of essence were mighty warriors. They were the very same bunch he had seen in the inn this morning. There was a man sneering at the bloodshed in the same manner as a veteran warrior would sneer at a recruit's reaction to his first kill. There was the strange woman he had seen with him, her hand cupped over her mouth in disgust. There was the boy with strange, cold eyes who almost seemed to cackle with a foreign energy, like a piece of amber that had been rubbed with silk.
His master had whispered that he'd see them again... and here they were, sure enough.
He turned his gaze back to the guard's woman.
"I deeply apologize for the commotion I may have caused. You will be happy to know that the deaths of both the old man and the soldier were very swift."