Mehitabel walks (she does not run) home the rest of the way to tell her mother.
She goes and reviews her notes on battery math. She could sort of feel how much it took out of her to do that. It was just a dab, but she has maybe forty dabs in her right now, and if she drops too close to zero she'll slow down in charging back up. The percentage she can use without having that problem will go up over time, as will how much oomph such a percentage represents, as will - assuming she does notable things and collects attention - her recharge rate. For the time being she'd better be very conservative except for things she may want to do frequently - like healing - where practice can help her get more efficient at it.
...Also: eeeeeeee.
Of course, unless she starts self-injuring, she can't practice all that regularly. And she still has Hebrew lessons and science lessons and especially magic lessons. Horace manages to dig up a spell to fix her clumsiness, but it's very, very complicated and might take a long time to fully master.
That's probably worth front-loading regardless of the time expenditure, unless she'll be able to do it in a week if she first waits two years. Mehitabel hops to.
If she does it now, it will take her most of a year including breaks to work on other magic. If she does it in two years, it will take her a slightly smaller majority of a year. Since this isn't enough of a trade-off to be worth the wait, she can "grow out of her clumsiness" a bit shy of her eighth birthday.
Excellent! And now she can run and do silly dances and play hopscotch.
Andrea celebrates by giving her a pair of enchanted skates for her eight birthday. The blades will switch from rollerblades to ice skates to more stable four-wheeled rollerskates at a mental nudge, and they'll do up their laces nice and tight on their own so you don't have to ruin your fingers putting them on. Horace's gift--a gloves, gown and shoes set that will teach you to dance--is similarly thematic.
She skates. She dances. She studies. She does little dabs of miracle, every now and then.
She gets better at magic with impressive speed. Horace is so proud. Andrea is thrilled to have a peer her own--well, not older than her, at any rate. (Frankly a peer her own actual age might have been less interesting--she's fourteen, now, and most of the girls she goes to school with have discovered boys.) For her ninth birthday Mehitabel finally gets books from Horace rather than an enchanted widget--he's been feeling a bit under the weather lately. Andrea makes her a waterbreathing necklace.
Poor Horace. Won't a healing spell fix it?
Anaphiel picks up the phone first. "Hello?" Pause. "Yes, this is her mother." Pause. "...What for?" Pause. "...No, I definitely can. That's not a problem." Pause. "Are you sure?" Pause. "...Alright then. I suppose we'll see you fairly shortly." Her voice gets progressively less happy through the conversation.
"Horace is in the hospital. He had a heart attack. The doctors don't think he's going to last more than a few more days."
"He's not coherent enough to cast anything, Andrea doesn't have anything of the appropriate magnitude condensed and probably doesn't have time to put it together, and her parents aren't magicians for some reason."
"How do you want to do this? I'm not suggesting you shouldn't, but logistics--healing a man on the brink of death in a large hospital is going to attract attention."
"Can he be sent home? If they think he's dying anyway."
"...Maybe. We'd have to convince Andrea's parents to bring him home."
"They wouldn't do it just because we said, and I don't know his exact condition--he made it known ahead of time that you were to be let know if anything like this happened to him, but that doesn't entitle me to his actual medical information, so it could be that the doctors won't let him be released at all."
"I'm probably not ready to be publicly miraculous yet... is he awake? Will he maybe be able to ask to go home if we visit him and tell him?"
"I think so...if it turns out we have to convince his son and daughter-in-law do you have a plan for that?"