Harman, red-faced, stared fixedly at the floor as he repeated his apology in a louder voice.
"Think yourself fortunate indeed you still live, only because a Guild Mage stayed his hand from righteous vengeance,” Grimm hissed. “I advise you to measure your words better before you speak them in future. As a last piece of advice, should any nameless ruffians happen to surprise me in some dark alley while I am here, I may well assume they have been sent by you. After I have dealt with them, I shall seek you out and you will find out to your cost that I can perform much more powerful, painful and destructive magic than the simple spell I have just demonstrated."
Grimm raised a hand and Harman flinched. The mage contented himself by allowing a single blue flame to issue from each of his fingers for an instant before letting them die.
"Do I make myself quite plain, Harman? For your own sake, you should hope nobody else is foolish enough to trifle with me. If you have any friends, which I would find hard to credit, it would be in your best interest to counsel them to steer well clear of me. Now get out of my sight." The hapless Harman Hammerfist muttered a disavowal of any intended treachery and he shuffled out of the silent bar. Grimm followed him with deliberately contemptuous eyes. Then he returned to Dalquist and Harvel. The former hubbub resumed as if a signal had been given, and several people gave Grimm respectful nods as he passed, which he acknowledged politely.
"You should have left that oaf Harman as a smoking spot of grease on the floor, mage,” the swordsman grumbled as Grimm returned to his seat. “He's been a thorn in the side of many here, but he's never been stupid enough before to pick on a ring-bearing mage."
"What was that spell, Grimm? I can shatter substances, but I can't do what you did just then,” Dalquist muttered, keeping his voice low.
Grimm noted his friend's wide eyes, and he knew Dalquist was impressed by his impromptu spell—the first he had ever cast to resolve a real-world problem.
"Oh, just for a moment, I saw the forces holding the metal together,” Grimm muttered, feeling as if he might burst from sheer pride. “I told them to let go. The effect was quite nice, I think, even if it took a lot of energy.” He smiled. “I think I'll call it the Spell of Enhanced Disintegration." Grimm drained his beer-mug and used Redeemer to reduce the intoxicating effect of the ale down to a pleasant, warm glow. He then ordered another round, addressing the landlord with politeness but with a definite ring of confidence in his voice. Uril's response, although amicable, carried an unmistakable note of respect and even deference.
"You see, Grimm?” Dalquist whispered. “Being even a tyro Questor of the First Rank can raise a man above the commonplace. Now you have proven yourself here, you have gained more respect than the mere label ‘mage’ would grant you. You handled the situation in exactly the right manner: without unnecessary bloodshed, yet sending an unequivocal warning to others without employing hollow threats or bluster. I don't think you'll have any more trouble here."
They drank a little more, and now even the self-possessed swordsman seemed to take interest in Grimm, asking of his background and eagerly devouring what little Grimm felt Guild protocol allowed him to tell of his magical training. Harvel listened to Grimm's account of his violent Outbreak and the destruction of a classroom with no trace of disbelief, nodding and smiling appreciatively. Dalquist had just begun to launch into a tale of the aftermath of one of his Quests when a shadow fell across the table. Grimm had particularly acute hearing, but he felt stunned that he had heard nothing to warn him of any approach. He looked up, startled, to see a slender man with shoulder-length dark hair, olive skin, catlike eyes and markedly pointed ears. From his studies, the young mage knew the interloper must be a member of the