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.