Time passed. Kit continued scrambling about in her tree, climbing higher and higher till she got to the tallest branch that could support her weight. She put her back to the trunk of the tree and straddled the branch, leaning back against the trunk. The higher she went the higher the garden around her rose, or seemed to rise, weaving up taller and taller, refusing to give even the slightest hint of the maze's temporary layout as it shifted.
For a while she had managed to ignore that he father existed. But this time she couldn't. "Darling?" He called up the tree. "You've lost your flower."
Kit blinked, reached up and played with her ponytail. There was, sure enough, no flower there anymore. She must have lost it at some point during the climb. She shrugged. "So?" She said, peering down at her father between the branches.
"Wait here." Kit watched him march away toward a nearby bundle of flowers, and her eyebrow raised, half-convinced that the maze would do the cruel thing and close him off from her. But it allowed him to reach the flowerbed, reach down and pluck something and returned back, still walking. Her father had, she realized, a flower in his hand, a vivid blue. Kit leaned out from her branch a little, stared down.
"With Reimancy," he said. "You can transmute the elements, but not just that. You can attract and control what's already there." Her father held up a hand a thick globule of red, shimmery res slowly eased out of his hand, floating and shifting in the air. "We can attract and control what's already there, too. Can you control gaseous res, Kit?"
Kit frowned, nodded.
"Good." He made a motion with his hand, and suddenly the globule of res separated into a thick cloud of gas, no bigger than a man's head. "Reimancers make things. That means that air is an actual substance, just one that moves easily, like water. If you can attract all of the air in the middle of the gas, keep it from moving, you can make a bubble where things can sit, if they are very light." He dropped the flower into the red mists. It slowed, stopped, floated there. Kit's toes curled. Her father made a gentle upward motion with both hands and the res, along with the flower, ros into the air, floating between the branches until until it was maybe three arms length away from Kit.
"This is as far as I can go," her father said. "Can you take it up the rest of the way?"
Kit chewed on her lip. "Gimme' a tick."
"What was that?"
"I said give a me a tick!" Kit breathed in sharply. She lay down across her chosen branch on her belly and shimmied further, further, further out onto the tree, till it dipped and groaned dangerously under her weight.
"Little Kova!" Her father said, and the flower started to sink.
"I'm fine!" Kit hissed, but she went no further the flower was still further away than she could reach. She wrapped her legs around the branch and held them tight to keep her place steady while her hands were free. "Just hold it there." Kit held out her palm toward the flower. As she pushed, Kit felt a sensation of pressure from the inside of her hand, and res leaked out, the pleasure of casting making her shiver. She kept it going until she had a decent amount of res out, brought her hands together and took them apart, trying to split the ethereal liquid into gas.
And she did, for a moment, but it faded fast around the edges, already dissolving away. "Focus, Kit!" Her father called on up. "Don't stop focusing!"
"I'm trying!" Kit said, her eyes narrow. She held her hand together till it overlapped with her little cloud, as thought containing it, and the fading of res around the edges stopped. Kit breathed in deep, made a gentle pushing motion. The cloud of res floated, floated until it met, then melded, with her father's.
"Are you attracting?" Her father asked. "You don't want to drop it."
"Got it," Kit said, though her voice felt tight in her throat. She saw it when her father cut off his res' support, the flower dipped, nearly fell before Kit's fingers clenched and it stopped in the air. "Haaaaaaa."
"Little Kova?"
"I got it." Kit hissed. She made a slight, upward gesture with her hands and the flower began to lift. So much slower than when her father did it. Was the flower dipping, falling alright? Kit swallowed hard and resisted the urge to wipe sweat from her brow. Still she lifted the flower higher, and higher, and higher . . .
Then it was even with her. She snatched at it with her right hand, catching it along the stem, and her res fell apart, having already served its purpose. Her hands trembled as she examined the blue-white flower her father had picked out for her. It seemed very beautiful. Kit tucked it proudly into her ponytail and let her hands hang free over the edge, smiling a broad smile down her father. "I got it!"
"Very good, little Kova! Very good!" Her father shouted up at her, and she saw legitimate mirth in his face. A long-sought approve that made her heart warm in places that she thought gray and cold. Attraction is the basis of so much advanced reimancy. Especially for aeromancers, like you. Geomancers need earth to use attraction, pyromancers need fire, hydromancers need water . . . But air . . ." He said. ". . . Air is everywhere."
Kit swayed in place where she lay, felt her eyelids start to droop a little—can do anything—Ionu's own daughter—the world is yours—the sky is yours—Alvadas is yours—open skies and blood red eyes—Sivah, Sivah sing a song of summers spent in silence—Kova? "Kova!" Her father shouted, and Kit just caught herself before she toppled from her branch. "Are you listening?"
"Papa," Kit murmured, eyes nearly closed. "I feel weird."