Cam is dipping a grilled cheese sandwich into a bowl of tomato soup when he feels the summons. He goes ahead and grabs it. Doesn't even drop the sandwich.
"We did have craftspeople, in my world, doing things... Maybe it got written off as a parlor trick. That's tiny stupid magic anyone can do which is almost totally worthless."
"If your world doesn't understand how to build proper Memni and hasn't developed proper training techniques, I wouldn't be surprised if they dismissed it as useless."
"Yeah. Okay, so, nondistracting decor. Do you suppose the castle likes marble? I like marble."
"Marble is a good choice. The castle would probably appreciate it as well."
The walls grow a layer of lovely white marble, with a few minimalist swirl textures making it look almost like interestingly draped fabric. He adds some half-arches in the corners and covers the ceiling enough to dangle a minimalist frosted-glass chandelier from it. "I can do the floor too, if you will just jump at the same time as me to get out of the way," he says. "Three, two, one -" He jumps.
"Pardon, I didn't know vampirism came with levitation," says Cam, landing on a smooth marble floor. He stumbles slightly but manages to catch himself with flared wings before taking a spill. "All right, that's this place all prettied up."
"Now, the marks. Please, place your stone on the floor and reach down for it as if you were about to pick it up. Stop when your fingers touch the top."
Cam puts his stone on the floor. It rolls slightly, then stop. "Maybe I should make a divot for it? Or just make the mark out of rough tape or something." He straightens back up, then bends to touch the rock and freezes.
"A divot is traditional, yes. I should have thought ahead when you were making the floor."
Her not-wings flare as she steps up into the air once more.
"Sure." Cam jumps again and manages to land on his feet, and lands an inch above where he started, and now there is a smooth dip in the floor.
"That's better. The Castle should adjust the door to the correct height the next time you return here. Now, back to the stone."
She produces a piece of chalk from a pocket of her dress.
"So. We've confirmed that you can pick up the rock from your current position. Does it feel natural and comfortable? Once you start in earnest, you won't be able to adjust, so do as many practice trials as you need to be certain that you're the right distance from the stone."
Cam tries picking up the rock a few times. After a couple tries he picks up his feet one at a time just long enough to put shoes on them, and then he resumes. He experiments with wing positions. Eventually: "This is good, I think."
"There. If you would like to make those outlines more permanent, feel free."
"Excellent. Your first task is to find a way to pick up that rock that you can repeat exactly the same way every time. With sufficient daily practice, most students build the muscle memory within three to six months. I'll check in on you from time to time to evaluate your progress and consistency. Once that first hurdle is mastered, we can move on to visualization practice and the exercise of the will."
"In the academies? Eight. For people like us who do not sleep, the process can be accelerated significantly. I acquired my first Memnos in three years, rather than the usual five."
"I don't sleep, but I'm very subject to boredom. Maybe I should rig up something that records me and beeps if I deviate from the pattern? That might get me into a groove quicker."
"The method doesn't matter, only the resulting form. If it works for you, do it. Personally, I find the process meditative: it's something useful to do with my time when I would normally be asleep, and it effectively prevents me from becoming preoccupied with stress. I've practiced for so long now that I can find the flow almost instinctually. In that space, there is only myself and the form."
"I've tried meditating. It doesn't really work for me. I'll put up with it to get more magic, but seeing as I'm immortal I might want to spread it out a bit. Well, we'll see."
"You would probably learn to enjoy meditation as well, if you were incapable of sleeping."
"I honestly don't sleep most of the time. Sometimes if I'm bored with all my projects and don't have a new one lined up, or I'm sick of being that little bit jittery I get on the relevant dose of caffeine, but not more than a couple times a month unless I'm on a really boring summon with a tight binding. I feel like my life would not substantially change if sleeping became impossible instead of optional except that I'd drink less coffee. I thrive on things to do. Hell's kind of short on meaningful things to do but I can still learn stuff and read and play games and perform experiments and correspond with people and see what the summoners have for me to do. And fly! Flying is great."