Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 15 (Fin) – Never Let Me Go

Joe’s orbs end up doing the trick: even though Pete trips before he can toss the flare, everyone sees it and race to the source. As he sinks into the bog, utterly exhausted, he says he doesn’t want to die there, and wants to see everyone again. He gets his wish: he doesn’t die, and Oliver, Nanao, Chela, and Vera are there when he comes to.

After some hugs and tears, Lia makes her presence known, and begins an incantation that they can’t stop, leading to the creation of a “Grand Aria”, a little world in miniature where Lia reigns supreme. It takes the form of a giant womb. No one can get in, and no one can escape.

Stacey and Lynette end up caught in the Aria as well, but Vera knows even with numbers on their side, they’re all now living under Lia’s rules. Interestingly, their magic doesn’t seem to suffer, as they’re able to destroy newborn chimeras aplenty; it’s just that they never stop coming.

Vera decides to take a gamble and rattle Lia’s cage by telling her she was never good enough for Alvin. Lia’s reaction shows Vera that there’s still some humanity left in her, or she wouldn’t be lashing out in anger. Vera’s whole hope is to create an opening long enough for her underclassmen to strike, but she pays dearly in the form of grievous bodily harm.

With Vera out of commission, it’s up to Nanao, and between her and Oliver I thought we might get one or two Spellblade attacks. But while Chela and the others give Nanao enough time to get within range to kill Lia, when the time comes to bring her sword down, she can’t do it.

She gets knocked off her broom and picked up by Oliver. She apologizes for not being able to get it done, for Lia was “but a child” to her, and she simply can’t bring her blade down upon a crying kid. Oliver understands; it’s just who Nanao is, and one of the reasons he cares for her so.

Now, it would appear to be curtains for the good guys, but Lia’s humanity remains exposed after Vera ripped off the magic scab to reveal a raw wound of longing. Lia watches Oliver holding Nanao and wonders how long its been since someone held her like that.

Just then, a beautiful, pure, piercing song emantes from outside the Aria, and holes and fissures start to form, letting bright white light in. Alvin and Carlos have made it. That “Final Visitor” thing they mentioned last week? It’s time for that, because the Whitlows have a pact with the Salvadoris.

Because Carlos is a castrato in order to preserve his magical singing voice, he is utterly immune to all forms of sexual magic. In other words, he’s Salvadori Kryptonite. So if Lia were ever to be consumed by her family’s magic, as she is here, he can come in and put and end to it.

Of course, that power comes with a price; a price Carlos knew all too well but was prepared to pay. Taking Lia into his arms and calming her eliminates her threat to the rest of Kimberly and the world, but the two of them end up dying in each others’ arms.

Carlos tells Lia he loves her and always has; Lia tells him he hates her, but because he’s casting away his life to save her. His lingering final song evaporates the Grand Aria, and the crisis ends. And while I’d thought Vera too had bitten the dust, somebody healed her at some point.

Time passes, and before long the talk of Ophelia Salvadori fades away from the halls of Kimberly. After all, at a school where so many students meet violent ends, this was more or less par for the course. The Sword Roses manage to escape unscathed, and as a closer and stronger found family than ever.

Life returns to normal, with the Roses hanging out in Katie’s inherited workshop. Katie teaches Marco math, Olivier teaches Nanao magic, Guy cooks for Pete and the others, and Chela continues as the motherly heart of the group. When four teachers pass them, they all bow to show respect, but as they pass, Oliver shoots them a death stare.

They are his future targets, for which there was no time this season to cover. The final shot of a hungry Nanao breaking him from that stare, telling him to hurry up so they can go eat, exemplifies Oliver’s predicament going forward.

In Nanao, Chela, Katie, Pete, and Guy he has people he cares about and doesn’t want to lose or get involved. He’s not some avenging angel with nothing to lose. At the same time, he has the solemn duty to avenge his mother. Hopefully we get a second season to explore how he juggles those responsibilities, and learn if and when those two lives will cross.

Rating: 4/5 Stars

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 14 – The Melancholy of Ophelia Salvadori

Ophelia isn’t some cartoon villain who is just evil because. She never asked to be the descendant of a succubus. As she tells her only friend Carlos years ago, she doesn’t make love to anyone, she merely devours. Her only duty as bestowed on her by her mother is to create superior progeny through selective breeding. But Carlos always thought she could, and should be more.

As Katie and Guy do their part by carefully taking class notes for their friends, Oliver, Nanao, Chela and Vera traverse the third layer of the Labyrinth, which resembles the Dead Marshes in The Lord of the Rings. Oliver, the only male among them, is tough, but they draw closer, he can’t help but grow…hornier, and more sensitive to Nanao’s tendency to be too close. He sucks it up and takes his medicine.

When the party reaches a lake impassible on foot, they build a boat with Guy’s toolplants, and Vera gives a crash course in walking on water should the need arise. Nanao gives it a go but sinks like a stone; only when she’s watched Oliver do it does she get the hang of it.

When Vera, all too aware of the gentle love triangle in play, pointedly asks Chela if “she’s going to stay on the shore”, the question has more than one meaning! Their boat, driven along the water by Vera’s wind magic, is stopped in its tracks by a bone basilisk conjured by Cyrus Livermore.

Cyrus scolds Vera for bringing first-years here like lambs to the slaughter. Chela tries to negotiate with Cyrus, saying they only care about retrieving their friends. Alas, there’s nothing Cyrus wants other than their deaths. I loved Oliver noticing that Chela is trembling while asking why they can’t all get along. Chela is a heroine and a top-notch mage, but she’s still a kid. They all are!

They’re bailed out thanks to Vera luring a chimera below the water to the surface. It’s drawn to the one with the highest mana, which is Cyrus with his bone basilisk. Now preoccupied with the chimera, they are able to slip away on the boat.

From there, we check in with Alvin and Carlos, who wonder if “Lia” still remembers when she first arrived at Kimberly. That’s when the episode launches into Ophelia’s heartbreakingly tragic backstory and fall from grace.

Due to the powerful male-seducing perfume constantly emanating from her person, first-year Ophelia was instantly an outcast and pariah at school. The deck was stacked against her. But her only friend Carlos took her under his wing, welcoming her with open arms, and assuring her she’d be able to make other friends as well, starting with Alvin.

Alvin is unlike any other boy she’s encountered (Carlos excepted): rather than immediately give in to her aroma, he checks his baser feelings by using what I’ll call a “nutshot” spell on himself. Every time they interact and he starts blushing too much, Alvin magically kicks himself in the balls to snap out of the spell. This is hilarious, but also sweet as hell. Like, Sword Roses sweet!

After two months of kicking himself in the balls in her presence, one day Alvin declares that he no longer needs to resort to such measures to be Ophelia’s friend. When she asked why he went to such lengths for her, he’s very clear: whatever pain he endured was insignificant compared to the pain she’s endured her whole life: the pain of not belonging, of being perceived as a slut and a predator, just because of the blood in her veins.

After she officially befriends Alvin, he and Carlos introduce her to Lesedi and Tim, and welcome her into their nascent Campus Watch. Because Alvin is unable to properly control the mana he was born with, he literally burns himself when he uses flame magic. He comes to rely on Ophelia to heal him, and she heals the other members of the watch, finding not only camaraderie, but a purpose beyond her curse of a birthright.

The Watch’s ranks swell, but unfortunately, Alvin and Carlos can’t always be by Lia’s side. When they’re not, she’s cornered and bullied by classmates watch-mates who envy and resent her position as Alvin’s friend and right hand. They even believe she’s controlling him with her perfume.

The bottom line is, they believe Lia has become inessential to the workings of the Watch, as others are just as good if not better at healing magic and the like. She puts it to them, if she were strong, they wouldn’t have a problem with her, then unleashes her succubus spell to take them all out.

There’s no putting that toothpaste back in the tube, so as time goes on, not only is anyone who questions or opposes her taken down, but she begins to devour any man she pleases, eventually becoming the uncaring monster she always feared she’d become. She even attacks Tim, and a rift grows between her, Alvin and Carlos. That last bit I’d wish we’d seen more of, even if it was just one conversation with them.

That brings us to the present, with the spell continuing to consume Ophelia. You get the feeling even if she wanted it to stop, she’s no longer strong enough on her own.

And that’s what she is at the moment: totally alone and isolated. Alvin and Carlos admit they didn’t do enough to save their kohai or prevent her from going over the deep end, and with the mention of a “final visitor”, there’s a strong indication one of them may die so that they can at least be there for her before she is completely consumed.

I hope it doesn’t come to that, and when they reach Lia, they can help pull her out of this tailspin while also saving everyone she captured. I wish that because it’s now been confirmed what I’d suspected: this mess happened to Lia because of who she was told she always was, not because she wanted it to happen.

Pete is able to use the orbs Joe gave him to escape from his cell, evade the magical beasts, and send a flare up into the sky once he emerges from the lair. We see that he’s in the same marsh where Oliver’s party, as well as Stacey and Lynette currently are.

Hopefully they spot the flare and make a beeline to that location for the big finale. Until then, I find myself not only rooting for Pete an Fay to be rescued, but for Lia to be saved as well. This was an efficient, effective, compelling piece of character work.

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 13 – Frolick In the Forest

Years ago, Ophelia Salvadori was all alone, and she hated it. But one day a boy approached her, and rather than go crazy and try to ravage her due to her succubus pheromones, he’s not affected at all. Having passed his self-appointed test, he takes a shocked Ophelia’s hands in his and declares them friends.

It’s another reminder that while she was introduced as a two-dimensional villain, there’s a lot more to Ophelia, and there are tight-knit groups of friends in Beverly other than the Sword Roses. As Oliver, Nanao and Chela continue their descent through the second layer with Vera, we learn more about this strange place.

For one thing, the fake sun in the sky that never sets is a piece of ancient technology that cannot be replicated. I’m not sure if that nugget of info will ever be crucial to the plot, but it’s still neat. They also make use of Guy’s toolplants to build bridges and his delicious cakes to fill their bellies.

While they and the StuCo take different paths, we also see that Stacey is in the Labyrinth to retrieve her beloved Fay, with her fourth-year half-sister Lynette escorting her. Finally, Teresa is also lurking, and is extremely pleased when Oliver asks her to serve as an advance scout.

While Teresa takes care of quite a few magical beasts on her own, eventually Oliver’s party has to confront one. In this case, it’s a gorilla-type beast that has been wounded by the chimeras. Nanao calms her heart, gets right in the beast’s face, and asks nicely if they can pass without violence, and the beast lets them.

However, that beast is soon gruesomely beheaded by a giant mantis-like chimera with razor claws. Vera falls back and lets this be her underclassmen’s first big test. Oliver, Nanao and Chela work well as a unit, mixing up elemental spells in order to discern weak spots.

That said, the chimera is not only full of surprises, but surprises specifically designed by Ophelia to affect those looking for those weak spots. As a result when Oliver goes for the head, he’s met by a fusillade of spikes. Vera suddenly rushes in, worried that he might have been killed.

But alas, Oliver is fine; he used a chunk of the chimera’s own exoskeleton as an improvised shield. The three complete their takedown of the beast, and Chela is so happy they defeated it together she gives Oliver and Nanao a big ‘ol hug. With their first test passed, they continue their journey, cutting down any chimeras in their way.

While resting in a cave for the night, Vera asks Oliver why the he and the others are going to far to save Pete. Oliver recalls how the six of them were the ones who didn’t run away when the troll nearly crushed Katie. That includes Pete, which doubly impressed them because he’s so new to the magical world. He didn’t run away, so they won’t run away.

Vera legit admires what a beautiful friendship the Sword Roses have, but there’s something else piquing her curiosity: Oliver’s whole deal. She can buy both Chela (extraordinary family) and Nanao (extraordinary place), but she doesn’t understand how such a perfectly average and ordinary mage like Oliver is a match for both in combat.

Naturally, Oliver is coy, and Vera can sense she’s hit a sore spot and decides not to dwell on it. She needs Oliver and the others to be on top of their game both physically and mentally as the near the far more dangerous third layer. Meanwhile, Joseph is the first of the captured males to come to.

When he learns that Pete is currently a woman due to his Reversi status, he helps him in he only way he can (with most of his mana sucked away): by digging his hand into his own chest and pulling out three magic orbs he keeps there for emergencies. One is a bomb, another a smoke bomb, and a third a distress beacon.

Finally, because he’s relying on this “nobody” to save his life and the lives of the other captives, he does Pete the courtesy of asking for his name. Pete steels himself and gives it, with a resolve and determination that makes me confident that combined with all the outside forces nearing their location, this is all going to work out okay, and maybe Ophelia won’t have to die for that to happen.

Rating: 4/5 Stars

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 12 – Class Is in Session

Alvin, Carlos, and their fellow StuCo members Lesedi and Tim head down to the Labyrinth to rescue the students Ophelia has abducted. Alvin curses himself for not acting before things got out hand, and Carlos tells Alvin to take care of things should he screw up. The Sword Roses are to a person restless about not being able to do anything.

Nanao is actually the most pessimistic, as her battlefield experience tells her Pete only has a 2-in-10 chance of surviving. But before the Roses start fighting further, Chela says it’s time to get back to class. Oliver meets with Gwyn and Shannon, but while they’re planning to join the StuCo, their larger force cannot reveal itself yet.

Even Professor Garland, clearly one of the nicer teachers, tells Katie that faculty can only go to the Labyrinth to search after students are missing for eight days, and that she mustn’t rely on teachers to come to their aid every time. Kimberly is about exercising independence and self-reliance; it’s how strong mages are made.

Chela reports to Oliver that she unsuccessfully appealed to her father to help, as he told her the moment she can’t protect her own friends is the moment she never should have made them. More tough love. So Chela is determined to go down to the Labyrinth. Oliver won’t hear of her going alone.

Their talk is interrupted by Vera, who takes them to Katie, who has offered up her body to Vera for all the research she wants in exchange for her help. Oliver and Chela ain’t about to let that happen, but fortunately Vera is open to a compromise. She’ll accompany them to Ophelia’s lair on the third level of the Labyrinth, and even train them on the way.

In exchange, Katie will become her official research assistant, not subject. The deal is struck, but while Nanao prepared her bag for what she deemed the certainty of Oliver and Chela coming for her, Katie and Guy are simply not strong enough for that part of the Labyrinth, so there are some emotional parting scenes of them.

Vera leaves her pet Milihand in Katie’s care while she’s away, telling her that the hand is also the key to her research, should she not make it back. With that, she leads Chela, Oliver, and Nanao through the looking glass and into the Labyrinth.

In our check-in with a weakened Pete, he finds himself the only one not unconscious or restrained by a creepy red claw thingy. Still, he fains sleep when Ophelia stops by with her chewing gum walk, assuring her sleeping princes that as long as they stay asleep, it will only feel like a bad dream.

Unfortunately, Pete is not asleep. While on the first layer, Vera explains that Ophelia has Succubus lineage, and used her womb to create the chimeras who captured Pete and the others. She’s using their mana in order to create something even greater than a chimera; possibly something closer to her ancestors’ ideal of the perfect being. Vera & Co. stop by the workshop for some potions and find Marco is there, having been ignored by the Chimeras.

Vera makes clear that Ophelia only needs the vitality—i.e. mana—from males for her research. Nanao decides Vera trustworthy enough to tell her that Pete isn’t fully male, or at least not always male, which puts him in even greater danger than the other captives, because he’s in Ophelia’s way.

The StuCo seems to be holding their own on the second level, and even run into an upperclassman in Kevin Walker, who helps in his way by providing a detailed map of the third level.

When Vera’s group comes upon their first chimera just before the entrance to the second level, she shows rather than tells them the proper way to defeat one. They have to assess and know their enemy’s weaknesses, like the Chimera’s poor eyesight that gets worse the more tentacles they sprout. They have to keep moving and not let their foe get a bead on them.

And they must have a plan of action for taking it out: in this case, close-range lightning. Her threefold lessons lay out the three jobs a mage must do, but she makes clear three mages could each take one job. That may be true, but Chela (and Oliver) don’t want Nanao to take on the brunt of the danger. The three of them will each perform all three jobs, sharing the danger equally, all to get Pete back safe and sound.

Rating: 4/5 Stars

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 07 – For Pete’s Sake

It’s been four months since Professor Grenville disappeared in the Labyrinth. Headmistress Esmeralda gathers the faculty to ask if any of them are responsible. They aren’t, but they consider who might be. When asked what happens if it’s a student, Esme simply says they’ll suffer like any other culprit.

It’s clear Oliver is biding his time after finding the perfect opportunity to off one of the individuals on his list who betrayed and murdered his mother, so the show presents us with something entirely different and unexpected: One morning, after a dream where he transforms into a woman, Pete wakes up with breasts.

He—or rather they—keep it a secret both from their dorm-mate Oliver and from the rest of their friends, who pass it off as prickly Pete being particularly standoffish that day. The group has their first broom-riding class, and Nanao is worried that it won’t go well since she’s used to riding a horse.

Upon given access to the broomhouse, she learns that brooms are living magical creatures who choose their partners and allow them to fly with them. While Nanao proves quite popular with the friendly brooms due to her massive amount of mana, she ends up choosing a “bucking” broom, embracing the challenge as she did her trusty steed.

After speaking a few words declaring her intent to pair with it, the broom flies up into the air, and then straight into her hand. After a brief red glow, she and the broom are matched, and she flies into the sky for the first time. It is one of the most joyful moments of the show, and I loved watching Nanao as much as her proud friends. Also, that wild broom’s last rider? Oliver’s mom.

I should also mention that during broom class Chela encountered her cousin from a branch family, Stacey Cornwallis, but Stace brushes her off. Later at lunch, Chela’s father Theodore pops in and gives her a big hug. It’s nice to see Chela off balance for once! She and the others learn that Theo is their new substitute alchemy teacher in missing Grenville’s stead.

After alchemy, we sit in on the group’s first magical engineering class with Professor Forghieri, one of the people on Oliver’s list. He runs an unyielding class, which includes throwing them into the task of diffusing four magical trap boxes in 60 minutes or suffering whatever they contain. Oliver and Chela manage to diffuse three of the four, but the fourth opens to reveal vicious flying snake/eel creatures.

Pete, who has been suffering bouts of pain throughout the day, is right next to the box, but Oliver shields them, getting bit in the process. Also, Guy does a thing! Having grown up on a farm and being well-versed in these creatures, he douses himself in water and casts lightning on himself to knock them out.

After this ordeal, Oliver, who is aware that they’ve changed, requests a private chat with Pete in the conservatory. Pete confirms that they now possess a female anatomy, and Oliver tells them it’s because they’re a Reversi, someone who can switch back and forth between sexes.

From the get-go, Oliver takes care to describe this as an extremely rare gift, not a curse. He demonstrates how by telling Pete to cast a lightning spell, and to their shock (pun intended) they’re much better at that element as a woman than they were as a man.

The two are interrupted by Chris Whitlow, who tells Pete that Oliver told them everything he wanted to say, showing Oliver’s quality as a friend and a person. Chris offers Pete an invite for a gathering that night.

Pete is escorted to the first-level of the labyrinth by Oliver, as well as President Godfrey, who takes the opportunity to apologize for the incidents they’ve gotten caught up in. He’s been working hard to make Kimberly a safer place, but worries he hasn’t made enough headway. Oliver internally praises Godfrey as one of the good ones.

This is borne out when Godfrey grants them access to the gathering, which is full of students with sex-based magical traits such as Pete. In other words, this is this magical world’s version of the LGBTQ community. Three upperclassmen soon approach Pete and Oliver, whose stiff formality evokes laughter. They tell both Pete and Oliver that there’s no need to worry, they’re all friends here.

That’s when attention is directed to the stage, where Chris begins to sing in a gorgeous enchanted voice while Oliver’s brother Gwyn accompanies on the violin. Oliver notes that there’s no charm ability in Chris’ song, but it’s something simpler and more pure. And that’s what this part of the episode felt: simply pure, and beautiful.

Yes, Pete went through a sudden and immense change, but they’re not alone. Both Oliver and the many others like Pete are there to provide affirmation, support, friendship, and love. I especially appreciate Oliver being empathetic and kind even after he dropped his mask to kill Grenville. He’s a complex dude!

Pete and Oliver meet up with the others after the performance, and make up a white lie about magical training. I’m sure, when the time is right, Pete will tell the others (no doubt to prevent Guy from grabbing them as if they were still a dude). Even the reveal at the end of some sneering dude not happy about these friends being all buddy-buddy can ruin the lovely vibes of this episode. And like Oliver last week, Pete is suddenly much more interesting!

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 03 – A New Way to Live

Ophelie and Cyrus could probably achieve terrible things together if they joined forces, but each finds the other’s methods (her promiscuity, his necromancy) repugnant, so they fight each other with huge summoned monsters. Ophelie actually gives birth to hers; judging from her ahegao she seems to get a kick out of doing so.

When Cyrus blocks the underclassmen with his wall of bones, Nanao arrives to give them cover to escape. She also makes it sounds like she’s been looking for a place to die, and has found one. Oliver is ready to follow her into battle when Ophelie and Cyrus’ duel is cut short by the student body president, Alvin Godfrey.

Backed up by school prefect Carlos Whitlow, Alvin orders the two villains-in-training back to the depths of the Labyrinth, and escorts our first-years to safety.

Once there, Oliver gets in Nanao’s face and asks her what all the suicidal talk is about. Chela pulls him away, but is just as curious to know what’s up with Nanao, so she asks her to please tell them all if she can. That’s when Nanao looks back to the last and worst battle she ever experienced.

Even with a seemingly hopeless deficit in numbers, Nanao is able to easily carve her way to the enemy general, and dispatches his son, who was purportedly one of the finest warriors in the land, before she even knew it was him.

When the general orders his armies to kill her without learning her name, their spears are suddenly stopped dead…by a western mage on a broom. He invites Nanao to Kimberly, and here she is. But ever since being plucked from that battle—and from her certain death—Nanao has felt like she’s strayed into a dream.

When Nanao fought Oliver in class, she experienced shiawase, a moment of clarity and shared admiration and respect when locked in mortal combat with an opponent. But the battle was cut short, and Oliver pushed her away. Attempting to join the battle with the upperclassmen was her way of ending that dream on her own terms, before it ended on its own, worse terms.

Oliver thinks Katie is speaking out of turn when she says that, basically, Nanao is saying she’s heartbroken after Oliver rejected her entreaty of love and happiness (i.e. shiawase). But Nanao admits that yes, whether she fell for Oliver the person or his sword, to a warrior like her, there’s little difference.

This is when Chela asks Nanao, as a friend, to consider living her life in a new and different way than she did before. One need not cover themselves in blood or glory to thrive at Kimberly. Chela wants to spend more time with Nanao, and all of the others feel the same way. Indeed, it was clear Oliver was only upset with Nanao because he thought she was being too reckless with her life.

When everyone else chimes in agreeing with Chela, Nanao bows her head in apology and vows not to put her life in danger again. She also admits she’s happy she has friends at this school, since she hasn’t been able to learn much of anything in the classes so far. They all agree to help and support one another. If any dangers cross their paths, they’ll face them together.

It’s the Oliver-and-Nanao making up scene I’d hoped for at the end of last week, but I won’t knock the show for interrupting it to demonstrate how dangerous the school can be when our first-years are fractured. The next morning, Nanao clings to Oliver, who is both embarrassed and flattered. I love the varied reactions from the others to what is basically a newly formed couple.

Back in Garland’s Sword Arts class, Richard Andrews isn’t done with Oliver, and wants to fight him one-on-one. Oliver agrees, but before they get started Nanao grabs his arm, sensing he intends to lose on purpose. When Richard hears this he gets even more angry. Thus Oliver needs to give it his all to satisfy Nanao, and not humiliate Richard into desperation.

Chela takes Oliver aside to tell him she and Richard were childhood friends, always compared to each other by their elders, hence Richard’s inferiority complex. She’s not entirely sure how Oliver should proceed, only that some kind of fight is inevitable.

This dilemma is interrupted by news that Katie has rushed to the defense of the troll who went on a rampage at the parade. It’s about to be executed by faculty member Darius Grenville, but she stands fast in his path. Unamused by her insolence, when he learns she’s a “civil rights activist” he mocks her parents.

When she refuses to step aside, he uses an extreme pain spell on her, cementing his status as a real sonofabitch. Her friends come to her rescue, and thankfully don’t have to fight Grenville, as he’s told to stand down by fourth-year Vera Milligan, backed up by Professor Garland.

They inform Grenville that not only is there an ongoing investigation that demands the troll stay alive for now, and that it wouldn’t do to anger the growing pro-demi civil rights political faction, but the use of pain spells by faculty were banned five years ago.

Vera formally introduces herself to Katie as a fellow pro-demi advocate, and tells her she’ll be happy to help her in her efforts going forward as they share the same cause. Even though she’s still feeling the effects of the pain spell, Katie leaves the confrontation with a big smile on her face, having found a strong, cool upperclassman ally.

While the good vibes are somewhat marred by an inevitable duel challenge from Richard to Oliver, I still enjoyed this episode immensely from start to finish. Oliver and Nanao made up and may be an item, and we learned that Kimberly isn’t just a school full of perverts and assholes outside of the friend circle. In Alvin, Carlos, and Vera, there are good seeds looking after them too.

It’s a testament to the character writing that Garland’s explanation of the titular Spellblades (there are apparently only six of them at the moment) is the least interesting part of the episode. I’m sure they’ll come into play soon and a seventh will emerge, but for now I care more about these lovable kids.