Butcher Bain,
Please refrain from your celebration of the slaughter of an entire tribe of gypsies. It is improper and wholly barbaric... This was not a war you were fighting... you merely trodden upon bodies and cut them apart for your own sick pleasure. Gypsies are not to blame for this, and this unnecessary praise to the sky of getting rid of an entire race through genocide is something real men would find unacceptable.
Targus,
There will be no such lynching, of you or your person. I have at least a couple of Romani friends who fear to come here because of this group that had supposedly disbanded last market day. If you wish to come into town for a peaceful lunch or dinner, or to speak with the Sheriff, than do so. I assure you that you may go to Arbor of your own volition, I will even escort you there if you wish, to speak with those who have accused you of theft. Last I had checked... thievery was not an offense punishable by death.
The rest of you,
Romani have helped out these lands... they have, from what i have heard, brought you food, entertained you, and even helped you defeat Prince Quassim. I know not what you fear, of them... but i have yet to meet one who hasn't at least bit been sweet to me. I even know of one who's children were stolen from her, but not by other Romani. I know of another who is a great earth healer and friend, always to bring joy and smile to every face that he meets. And then there is the Romani Noble friend of mine from far off lands.
So what if they can curse, but this cure is not the result of evil blood... it is just an innate power that they draw from with in themselves to right something that has wronged them... no Romani throws a curse with out proper reasoning... To insult them or their friends would make good reasons. If any of you have been cursed... you must have done something to deserve it, because these things are not tossed as generously as if they were arrows or spells.
So celebrate not the murder of innocents, but instead mourn the loss of great warriors of Fortannis. That's what they were, and that's what we all have to be, and if you believe that as a farmer or a butcher you need to take matters into your own hands, then by all means become an adventurer along side us, but be wary of who you intend to murder. No one is above the Laws.
With stern thoughts,