Amelie ran forward at them, though slowed down noting that they were still fighting. Most notably, she saw the young black-haired boy launched up into the air from a strike of the knight. He flew… and wasn’t coming back down as he should? It didn’t look like he was controlling his flight. In fact, he was flying straight towards one of those spheres. That didn’t look safe. There was no time to hesitate! [color=ded0a4]‘FLYING BOY! CURL INTO A BALL!’[/color] Amelie called up to him quickly, running so that she’d be as close to him as possible before she acted, if she had the time for it. The girl took a deep breath and focused her powers. She reached up into the air with a hand, and in the direction Luca was flying she manifested a Redirection Orb. So, she was simply going to redirect the movement of his flight so that Luca fell to the safe ground between herself and the knights. The more of him got inside the orb, the more complete her control of his movement would become, hence the command to curl up. If he was within five meters, then she could make the orb two meters in diameter, pretty safe. If he was within eight-and-a-half meters, she probably could make it one meter in diameter. Then at 10.75 meters, it would be but half a meter in diameter. Then it’d continue decreasing in size by half per half distance closer to twelve meters it got. Hopefully, her run had taken her close enough to Luca. If the orb failed to redirect him enough, by any reason, she’d quickly drop it and try to create a new one before he impacted the sphere, if she had the time. And, if that also wasn’t enough, perhaps a third, and so on. Amelie didn’t know if that sphere was actually dangerous, or if the flying person actually had abilities to save himself. If he did, she trusted him to use them. She just knew that she couldn’t possibly take the chance, since it was possible she was the only one who could save him now. She had never actually been in a situation where it felt like someone else’s life relied entirely on her power to be saved. It was really nerve-wrecking, yet she had no choice but to act.