You charge against them and duel them to the death!
4*
Despite being outnumbered 2 to 1, you maintain your grp on your weapon and remain on your horse. One by one, the blows of your opponents are parried by your blade before you can counterattack, dealing a gash here and a cut there.
4*
This continues for a while, and one of the combatants, no doubt younger and less stoic than his companion, finally gets unhorsed by you. You turn to the remaining combatant! Death or glory!!
3
You receive a wound from his mace at your left arm, and you feel a radiating pain from the wound. No doubt the bone has been damaged, if not broken altogether!
6
Then, a window of opportunity presents itself when the man misses his blow. You turn around and then thrust with your sword into his abdomen. He yells in pain as the blade strikes him between the ribs! His horse gets startled and he falls off onto the ground, his body not moving.
A moment later, some of your soldiers and orcish bodyguards rejoin with you, and one of the orcs throws a weighted-down rope around the legs of the other, still alive man, who tried to duel you. The man trips over, his ankles tangled, and is taken captive!
You run back behind the safety of your men as the captive is taken further back.
The melee continues, but in the same time a trumpet announces presence of a general - Duke Oro himself has moved his troops to your position, intending for a pitched battle! It seems that you will have an opportunity to settle the score here, at the northern encampment.
A) CHARGE THEN! DEATH AND GLORY!
B) I ain't ready to fight him! Retreat!
C) Let's try to draw his forces up to the capital's walls!