"You can make tiny weather for the tiny trees! That would be extremely cute," he says. "But please make sure you're very good at tiny weather before you try to put it on the tiny trees. And only give them gentle kinds of weather. I don't think they will appreciate lightning even if it is very tiny."
"Tiny rain with no lightning," agrees Stormy, "and I will try it first somewhere else. I think I might be the only thing in the world that likes lightning. It likes me too."
"If you can touch lightning without being hurt, then it makes perfect sense that you would like it. Most people can't."
"Yes, that's probably why. Is Niva the only other person who does lightning magic around? And she doesn't like it, it sounds like."
"Weather magic is rare; lightning magic in particular is even rarer. Winding Circle is the largest concentration of ambient mages in the world, and I'm still surprised to have two students here at the same time who have magic with lightning. Even if one of them got it in an unfortunate accident."
"Oh. I was sort of hoping there would be people around who could - I dunno. Play with the sky with me. Even only bits of it at once."
"There was another very famous weather mage here, but she died," he says. "I only knew her for a year or so, when I was thirteen."
"Mathilde looked at my list of great mages and there was a weather one on it who she said studied here. Trisana Chandler?"
"Ooh, food." Stormy finishes petting the last tiny tree and goes inside.
"Not especially," he shrugs. "It doesn't have magic in it. I made it, and I'm magic, but I'm not sure that counts."
"I know what I was doing, I just don't know if what I was doing is 'magic' or not."
"That's reasonably common with ambient mages, and craft mages much more so," says Rook. "Because our magic comes from things in the world around us that we might interact with in ordinary ways - and craft mages in particular have magic with processes and activities that aren't magical at all by themselves, that it's possible to learn and do in a completely ordinary way - it can be hard to draw a clear line between doing magic and doing things we just happen to have magic with. That's part of the reason why ambient magic is harder to spot than the academic kind. When an academic mage does magic, it's usually very obvious."
"You'd think I'd be obvious. I think my magic-checker might not have been very smart. Then again he did check me in a closed up little room."
"Magic-checkers often only know the signs for academic magic, because ambient magic is so rare that it's very possible for a magic-checker to go their entire career without seeing one even if they know how to look. I'm sure he was very good at finding academic mages. You just happen not to be one."