Men.
Having had quite enough of the chaos that surrounded them, Tovrunn lifted the crystal she kept hanging from a thong about her neck, shifting it in midair until the captured starlight flickered to life. Letting go of it as it suspended itself before her, the displaced druids hands formed arcane symbols on either side as the light grew and then somehow rippled outward like a stone tossed into a still pond. As the light passed over her, something strange occurred; to those paying attention in the midst of pitched battle, it would seem as though Tovrunn's skin had been replaced with the night sky. And then suddenly as light pierced forth in the dull gray drizzle of the docks, she became far harder to ignore. Her eyes became moonlight, her joints shone like stars, her hair floated as though suspended in water, painted by the soft milky white light of the galaxy.
Seemingly heedless of this sudden transformation, Tovrunn coolly reevaluated the battlefield, deciding her next course of actions. Lifting her arm, with one brightly lit finger she traced the constellation of The Hunter on her forearm, ending the bow-like tracing with a bright streak towards the palm of her hand, as though the hunter had loosed an arrow at a target. As she did so the light solidified, as though it were plucked out of the sky by some fae hand, and formed a miniature version of the projectile. A dozen copies sprang to life and wrapped themselves around her forearm, waiting patiently to be used.
Nodding in satisfaction, Tovrunn turned her attention to the thugs who had loosed crossbow bolts at her beloved. "Sir Lancaelad! Sir knight! We must retreat!" she shouted, even as she focused the two thugs blocking their retreat in her mind. They must be removed if they were to survive. "Wēta fylgð ljós!" she shouted, tracing symbols again. Light again burst forth from her hands, searing and painful to behold, and shot forth towards one of the two enemies, leaving streaks in the after vision of those who witnessed it. Turning and drawing her arm as though she were pulling at the string of a bow, one of the arrows sprung away from her arm and lengthened, becoming an arrow of light which she loosed at the brigand that the mysterious knight now fought with before ducking down again behind the crate.
"We bring down the other one, and then we run," she said to her companions, both the sidhe and their charge. "We can't stay here."