This story works as a stand-alone piece, but you can check out the earlier Hidden Energies if you'd like to see more of the characters.
***
A copper bowl filled with water was floating through the air. It was doing its very best to stay level, going slowly, often stopping to correct itself, cautious not to lose a single drop. Yet tragically, this very caution would prove to be its undoing. When it was already more than halfway across the room it tilted dangerously to its left - and instead of just accepting a small spill, it tried to save its whole load, overcorrected to its right, lost its balance, and with a splash and clatter fell to the floor, where it joined numerous others of its kind in a great puddle.
Yohan swore under his breath. Around the four tables, the twenty or so other students made sympathetic noises.
"Well now, lad!" Professor Ter Dekke's sonic boom of a voice filled the room. "Tell me what you did wrong!"
Yohan slouched back in his chair. "It was tipping over, and I overreacted trying to steady it, I guess."
"Baah! That wasn't the cause, that was the result! The primary cause was, as is so often the case, a student skimping on the fundamentals!"
"Oh boy, there we go," Yohan whispered. Professor Ter Dekke - who was a square, portly, luxuriantly moustachioed man in a crisp green-trimmed black suit, and at a first glance could be taken for a very fancy walrus - adjusted himself and addressed to the classroom one of his all-time favourite pontifications.
"Lots of you are still using magic naively, like children. Yohan, you held the bowl by its edge, as if your mind were your hand. If you want to get better, you must overcome your instincts, feel the essence of an object, not merely its shape."
Yohan scratched his neck. "I'm at this school because I want to be a geomancer, why the hell do I even have to take telekinesis?" he quietly asked nobody in particular.
Niko, who had all this time been eyeing the longcase clock by the door behind him and tapping on the tabletop, slowly turned to him. "Telekinesis is supposed to be really good training for the brain, you know." He shook his head, flinging his mess of brown hair away from his eyes, and smiled. "Though yeah, in your case it's kind of like training turtles to sprint."
"And you can't effectively manipulate the essence if you don't understand how it moves in space! Baah! Let's quickly review the trigonometry!"
Yohan solemnly placed his hand on Niko's shoulder. "My friend, I sincerely thank you for supplying your worthless fucking opinion," he pronounced. "Say, why are you in such a good mood recently, anyway? Like, this past week or two I've been hearing a lot more of your awful wit."
Niko shrugged. "Dunno. Spring's come?"
Spring, indeed, had come to the Vallnord Academy, and though this particular afternoon was dull and overcast, the overall return of sunshine did a lot of good to everyone's morale. You could especially appreciate it in classrooms such as this one - high up the new wing of the Academy, with large, red-draped windows and a high ceiling, the bookshelves and the tables a reddish mahogany, very unlike the close medieval halls of the old wing. They were also all done with the trimester's exams, and had a week-long spring vacation to look forward too - in short, even perennial worriers like Niko had to admit that things were looking up.
Professor Ter Dekke was now by the blackboard, drawing triangles, writing formulas, sketching diagrams. He was doing all these things at once, with three different pieces of chalk, and with his hands folded idly behind his back.
Yohan had to admit that the man's mental control was absolutely insane. Everyone in the world is able to haphazardly lug a heavy object around (though to an untrained mind it takes more effort than just giving it a physical push), but this sort of fine-tuned manipulation? Now Yohan could telekinetically sign his name with a pen, calligraphy and all, and everyone back at his home town agreed that it was a pretty great trick. Ter Dekke's triangles were ruler-perfect, his writing confident and neat. The way he focused, maintained, and divided his attention, without ever ceasing to lecture, was just something else. No wonder he was one of the nation's most renowned experts in the field. Yohan now started to wonder whether this was something anyone could train themselves to do, or did you have to just be born with an immense, natural talent?
"So, again - you have your vector of gravitational force acting on your object here, and you have your desired direction here. Now, in our standard framework, if we introduce our regular old matrix of spatial influence, three by three, and with a given determinant..."
It took something special, right? Take his classmates, for instance. To end up at Vallnord, they all had to be pretty good - but how many of them could he picture becoming truly high-end, elite tier mages? He looked around. Of all the students, sitting or slouching in their black velvet uniforms and following the lecture with various degrees of understanding, he really could picture nobody. He looked directly across the table from him. Oh, right. Diane. Yep, that he could imagine. She probably had the talent and the drive.
It was curiously easy to instinctively omit her while thinking about your peers. You could feel she was a little bit apart. It wasn't like she was arrogant or anything - she was quite alright in person. It's just, she always knew exactly what she was doing, and apparently assumed that this was deeply true of everyone else, and thus talking to her for any length of time always ended up making you feel acutely aware of all the shit you did not have together in your life, and then you felt somewhat anxious about that, and, and and - well long story short, the gal was a little unnerving.
"...indeed, there is nothing more to all of this than understanding the change of basis that is taking place here. These are the basics. You may think that this is not instinctive, not intuitive, but in truth all intuition is learned. Intuition is just knowledge that has become so ingrained in your head that you can process it unconsciously. In telekinesis, as in all fields of human activity, if you truly understand the basics, you can do everything." The sticks of chalk landed neatly on their tray, and in turn from Ter Dekke's desk a copper bowl rose up. "You can make things dance." The bowl swirled upwards, and turned over. The water poured out of it very slowly, and collected itself in mid-air in a perfect sphere. "You can make them move in any direction you wish. You can even make them move inwardly, into themselves." He pointed at the bowl, and all of sudden it shivered, and sounded off like a gong.