Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 06 – Mask Off, Mask On

My thoughts going in were They got this, right? Sure, Vera’s an upperclassman and mad scientist, but it’s 2-against-1 and we clearly haven’t seen all that Oliver and Nanao can do. And yes, indeed, they got this. But the boss battle is still steeped in danger throughout.

Oliver and Nanao prove a very effective duo, as Nanao launches forward attacks and Oliver bails her out when she’s too reckless. He also keeps Vera off balance with a creative array of spells. Nanao even shows she can deflect spells with her blade, as if it was truly the extension of her body she believes it to be.

Vera has a little too much fun against her kohais, allowing Nanao to slip behind her using a well-placed bounce spell from Oliver. She then reveals she has a second eye in her left hand, but faced with this unexpected tactic, Nanao continues to simply charge forward.

Rather than getting petrified or injured, her blade cuts through space and time to close what should have been an impossible distance and cleaves Vera’s hand clean off. To Oliver, this undefendable ability is none other than a heretofore unknown (and titular!) seventh Spellblade.

Godfrey and Whitlow arrive too late on an anonymous tip, interrupting Nanao’s attempt to get Oliver to give her a victory kiss. Oliver and Nanao both fine and will be fine, but worry about how Katie will take the betrayal of a senpai. But after she recovers in the infirmary and they tell her what happened, her reactions surprise them both.

Rather than despair in this betrayal, she turns the other cheek, then kisses Oliver and Nanao on theirs—simple tokens of gratitude for saving her. She then declares that she’s not going to let this get her down, nor is she willing to wash her hands of Vera. She forgives her, and vows to speak to her properly.

Vera’s betrayal only galvanized Katie’s resolve to continue toughening up while remaining quintessentially Katie Aalto: empathetic, emotionally intelligent, forgiving, and kind. She aims to graduate from a school a little kinder than when she first arrived, a declaration that brings tears to Oliver’s eyes.

Those tears are understandable; who wouldn’t be moved by Katie’s resilience in the face of face of betrayal? But I wouldn’t understand their additional meaning until later in the episode. As he expected and as Richard warned, Professor Grenville approaches him. Oliver leaves his friends to go with him, and on a path for which there may be no return.

Grenville explains the reason for summoning Oliver as they descend back into the Labyrinth. It was pretty evident by now, but the road of magical discovery is soaked with the blood of mages. When a powerful spell is too much for a mage, the spell absorbs him, and becomes even more powerful.

That makes it an enticing prize for the mage or mages strong enough to master that spell. Call it magical scavenging with a hint of magical cannibalism. It’s an interesting, and appropriately brutal mechanism for magical development, and explains why the mortality rate at a school is so high.

In keeping with the darkness of this magical world, we simply haven’t known Oliver’s Whole Deal all this time…until now. “Oliver Horn” is a persona; a mask he wore to stand out as a jack-of-all-trades, master-of-none student who might prove a useful assistant.

Little did Grenville know he was recruiting someone who had a major vendetta against him. Oliver asks him where he was on a specific date and time seven years ago. When Grenville deflects, Oliver draws his athame and steps to Grenville. He then reveals that he is the Fourth Spellblade, using it to defeat Grenville with one move.

But he’s far from done with the man who murdered his mother. Adopting an entirely different demeanor, Oliver proves he’s both masochist and sadist when it comes to his bloody goal of revenge, explaining how he made sure to endure all 128 types of pain that were exacted upon his mom by Grenville and others seven years ago. That allows his own pain magic to exhibit those same 128 forms, which he uses one by one to torture Grenville.

Once Oliver gets to 57 (is the writer a Heinz fan?), Grenville finally says “the magic words” he wanted to hear: Please…end it. Reduced to begging for his life, Oliver obliges with all due haste. Immediately after, his older brother Gwyn, his sister, and his bodyguard Miss Carste appear before him, congratulating him for getting rid of the first of their mother’s murderers.

A whole army of young mages file in and bend the knee before Oliver, whom Gwyn calls by his real name, Noll. He places the mask from the OP over his eyes, the symbol of his right to lead the family, presumably as the inheritor of their mother’s Spellblade. But there is still much work to do. There were seven people involved in their mom’s demise, and six remain.

As he lists them like a magical boy Arya Stark, w learn they consist of other Kimberly professors we’ve met, who similarly don’t seem to suspect who Oliver is and what he wants. The fact he doesn’t look much like his mom, as well as concealing his true power, has helped him maintain anonymity.

Chief among those names, and likely to be Oliver’s final target, is Esmeralda, the current headmistress and someone who literally stabbed his mother in the back seven years ago. Notably, and crucially, it doesn’t seem like Emmy enjoyed having to do so one bit.

That makes me wonder: were these seven assailants simply Bad Guys trying to steal Oliver/Noll’s Spellblade, or is his family actually a serious threat to the magical world, making his mom a kind of WMD that couldn’t be allowed to live? Considering all the twists and turns I’ve endured thus far, I can’t help but consider all possibilities.

Oliver/Noll proves he’s no different from Vera: driven towards a singular goal: in her case, a future where demi-humans have equal stature and rights as humans; in his case, revenge for himself and on behalf of his family. And that’s where those tears at Katie’s words come back into play.

He wasn’t just moved by her resolve, kindness, and forgiveness. He wept because he believes he is beyond those qualities do not, cannot, and will never apply to him. He wears his royal mask with pride and conviction, but I can’t say with certainty that his Oliver Horn persona was merely an act.

And then, of course, there were Nanao’s prescient words: there is no joy in a blade wielded for revenge; only one wielded out of mutual love. I want to think Oliver and his siblings’ mom would not want them to sully themselves with the bloody business of revenge, which may offer some comfort and justice in the immediate, but is ultimately self-defeating.

Noll’s greatest enemy is himself. I believe Nanao, Katie, and the others have the power to deliver him from his ruinous path, but they have to somehow be made aware of it first. I don’t see Noll revealing who he is to them anytime soon, but at some point professors are going to start dropping, so one of his friends will surely catch a hint at some point.

Until then, this episode caps off the first half of Seven Spellblades by dropping some enticingly volcanic plot and character bombshells, and promises that the next seven (ha!) episodes will be must-see anime.

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 05 – Under the Skin

Oliver’s shadow, Carste, is extremely contrite about not being by his side when a Garuda attacked, but I can’t rule out that his brother hung him out to dry on purpose to test his mettle. Katie’s gentle treatment of the troll has him eating again, and Vera Milligan is very intrigued by her progress with the big guy.

Of course, it was fairly clear she was behind the Garuda attack owing to the shot of someone with identical hair at the end of last week’s ep. There’s also what amounts to a spoiler in the OP that was there all along of Vera looking sinister in front of some very foreboding vats in some kind of lab. That image haunts sweet Katie’s steps.

On the bright side of things, the bullying of Katie has ceased overnight, and Nanao is super-popular for her flashy fight with the Garuda. Katie resents that Oliver, whom it’s clear she has a little thing for, isn’t getting the same rewards. A playful Chela decides to give him one in the form of a “victory kiss”.

Before her lips reach his face, Nanao appears beside them, and when she hears of a victory kiss, she doesn’t hesitate giving Oliver one, much to Katie’s scandilization. Nanao even has Oliver about to kiss her back when his pretty older cousin stops by to say hi…and steal a kiss of her own.

Poor Katie…so much competition for her guy! For that matter, poor Guy and Pete, in whom no girls seem interested…

I’m glad this series hasn’t abandoned the occasional magical class sequence. We see the aftermath of a particularly bloody biology class in which garms and wargs are dissected (I’m surprised Katie went along with it), and we also have Grenville, the alchemy teacher, doing his best Severus Snape impression.

Unlike Snape, Grenville doesn’t mock Oliver when he comes to each and every classmate’s aid when they screw up the alchemy process, including and overconfident Pete who almost blew himself up. While Grenville’s praise is delivered with his usual dour surliness, it’s genuine praise, and Oliver’s friends congratulate him for finally getting some public props.

However, Oliver’s new frenemy Mr. Andrews gives him a friendly warning after class not to trust Grenville, who is infamous for inviting his favorite students to alchemy gatherings, then stealing their ideas and passing them off on his own. I’m more inclined to think Oliver will infiltrate Grenville’s little clique on purpose to gather more intel on Kimberly.

Richard also gets his friend (toadie?) Miss Mackley to own up to what she did during the parade in town. It was she who cast a spell Katie to make her legs run toward the troll. She’s sorry about that, and seems sincere enough, but she insists she didn’t cast a spell to drive the troll crazy. Oliver and Chela believe her. There must’ve been second spell-user.

Katie, who continues to show she’s far tougher than she looks, tables discussion of who did what to the troll, and decides to hang out with the troll more. To her surprise, he starts to speak, telling her o stay away from him, not because he doesn’t like her, but for her own good. Hiding behind a wall is an increasingly sinister-looking Vera.

While Oliver helps Nanao some fire and wind magic training, having her imagine the outside world and her body becoming one and such, Nanao says something that turns on a light bulb in Oliver’s head. At the time of the incident, Nanao didn’t think the troll was rampaging, but trying to escape to the school gates.

Oliver puts what he knows together and they rush to the troll enclosure to find Katie missing, and her athame on the ground. The troll tells them she was taken somewhere deep and dark—the Labyrinth.

Oliver and Nanao find a dark, abandoned classroom amidst Kimberly’s vast halls, go through a magic mirror into the Labyrinth, but he stops when they reach a point that will be too dangerous without upperclassmen support. Unfortunately, the one they’re pursuing already knows they’re there, and magically teleports them into her lab.

There, Vera makes no bones about her intentions: she is a demi-human rights activist who experiments on demi-humans in order to make them capable of human speech and intelligence, so they can one day join society. Fine ends, but far from fine means. She’s basically a mad scientist, and the very entities she claims to care about are her victims.

The troll wanted to get away from her, but with Katie, Vera believes she has the key to completing his development. To use that key, Vera wants to dissect Katie’s brain. She implies it will be a painless procedure and leave no scars, so I assume Katie won’t die, but still…this is really freakin’ bad and wrong!

When Nanao turns her hair white and rushes at Vera without assessing the situation, Vera reveals that the eye under her bangs is that of a basilisk, able to petrify anyone with her glare. Five of her siblings died before it chose her, demonstrating that some magical families are more barbaric than others.

But while her harsh, violent upbringing explains her motivations, it doesn’t justify her actions. Oliver and Nanao need to save Katie, or at least buy time for an upperclassman to help them out. But Vera is determined to perform her experiments and neutralize anyone who would stop her.

7 Spellblades continues to provide engrossing, satisfying storytelling, mystery weaving, and character and world building. One week Andrews does a face turn, the next Vera does a heel turn. These developments expertly keep the audience on its toes, while underscoring the danger of Kimberly contrasted with the cozy camaraderie of the friend group.

Rating: 4/5 Stars

Reign of the Seven Spellblades – 04 – Comrades In Arms

Thanks to her new senpai Vera, Katie is able to interact with the troll from the parade, and even work to gain its trust. But Vera can’t shield Katie from the barbs and snide comments from other students. Oliver and Nanao are preparing for an inevitable duel against Richard Andrews, but the bullying of Katie by their classmates becomes so bad that Oliver rises to their provocations and starts a fight. Nanao and Guy have his back.

Unfortunately we don’t get to see the bullies get their just desserts, but Oliver, Nanao, and Guy end up in detention cells. When Katie blames herself for not standing up to the bullies, Oliver rejects that; he started the fight, so this is his fault, not hers. She did nothing wrong.

Nevertheless, Chela notes that their little circle of friends is on an island now, with the rest of the first-years (mostly hoity-toity, anti-demi conservatives) hating their guts. This is confirmed when they’re led to the site of the duel with Andrews, and it’s a coliseum packed with hostile students.

Before their official duel begins, an “exhibition fight” commences, with Andrews demonstrating his prowess in the sword arts by slaughtering some kobolds (werewolf-like creatures). While our friends are disgusted by the spectacle, especially when handlers force a scared kobold to return to the arena, Nanao gives them a piece of her mind, calling the whole crowd scum. For this, she gets pelted by glass bottles.

When a Garuda, a high-level beast that Andrews didn’t at all expect to appear, appears, students are battered and bloodied in quick succession, to Andrews’ horror and panic. But it’s Nanao who finally stands up to the monster and crosses blades with it. She had no interest in fighting a rigged “duel” with Andrews, but this is a battle more her speed: one in which she must put her life on the line.

She does a decent job keeping up with the Garuda, the fact remains she alone is outmatched, so Oliver joins the battle…and quickly gets slashed across the midsection. When he retreats to heal himself, a cowering Andrews asks him how he and Nanao can fight the Garuda without fear. ‘

Oliver tells him he is scared, because he’s an ordinary person, but Nanao, a warrior, probably isn’t scared at all, so he needs to keep her from going too far and getting killed. As he gets up and returns to the arena, he tells Andrews that Nanao wanted to see how he fought too.

Back in action, Oliver tells Nanao he’ll give her an opening to make the kill, but things go a little pear-shaped. Oliver has to end up getting between Nanao and the Garuda, and very nearly meets his end, were it not for Richard Andrews, using his high-level wind magic to blast the Garuda away. It’s a triumphant moment, and I hope his new understanding of Oliver and Nanao will trickle down to the other privileged students.

This creates the opening Nanao needs, and she spares no voracity in beheading the Garuda. Once it finally falls defeated, Oliver is the first one to thank Richard, who admits that while he was scared of the Garuda, he was more scared of being seen as an embarrassment to his clan. Both Nanao and Oliver acknowledge the courage he showed by standing his ground, and when Oliver lends him a hand up, Andrews takes it.

From that point on, Richard is no longer Nanao and Oliver’s enemy, but they are all of them comrades-in-arms. Of course, Nanao was pretty badly slashed in her fight with the Garuda, so she needs to be patched up. But as Richard takes his leave, Chela also thanks her childhood friend, addressing him as Rick, and notes how long it’s been since she’s seen “how wonderful he can be”.

All’s well that ends well. I’m glad this wasn’t just as simple as the good guys beating the bad guys in a duel, but things going out of control and the good and bad guys working together to end the threat, resulting in a welcome face turn for Andrews.

As for the mysterious student who is loitering around the coliseum after everyone has left, I presume they’re the same person who sent Katie flying towards the troll, and perhaps the next significant threat to Oliver and his friends. The silver hair has me suspecting it’s Vera, which would certainly be a blow to Katie.