Rayllum’s S7 Arc through the Lens of S6

By surprisingly popular demand (aka I thought the poll would get maybe 30-70 votes max, not 151 holy shit thank you) I thought it was time to look at S6’s plotline for Rayla and Callum and how, in my personal belief, basically every single scene they have sets up their main ongoing storyline in S7. What storyline you ask? Well, I think there are basically there are 3-4 main threads that S6 either sets up or continually evolves for them

  1. The possession plot line
  2. Love > Mystery (Callum? + the cube and Aaravos)
  3. The Greater Good
  4. Love > Duty (Rayla) / the importance of breaking promises (Claudia, Runaan)

Most of these are pretty set in stone — only the 2nd one is what I would call speculative in regards to Callum’s interiority next season leading up to the possession — so let’s get through the most obvious one first, and start with

The Possession Plot Line

But wait, you say, Callum can’t be possessed again. He fixed the hole in his spirit caused by dark magic which means Aaravos can’t control him again.

Yes, and there is Ample evidence throughout the season (and prior seasons) that he will 1) do dark magic and 2) that they’ve kept on setting up the possession plotline throughout the majority of the season (6x01-6x05), which I’ll start with in one of their first scenes in 6x01:

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CALLUM: [Chuckles] It would’ve been a comfy and cozy death.

In a similar way that Callum’s first scene in 4x01 involves the mirror (Aaravos) and has him stumble over his various titles establishes that his main arc will be about his search for control over his identity/self, 6x01 highlights this again: he’s not a threat because he’s Callum, himself (“It’s just me”) so Rayla can stand down. This of course ties back into the loss of identity that the possession brings (“I felt so weak and out of control. I was his puppet”) and the promise Callum asked for in S4 that Rayla rejected (and we’ll get to the reiteration of it in 6x03 later).

We also see that in how Callum’s language has changed from season four both in his conversation with Rayla:

CALLUM: I’m not afraid that he’ll hurt me. I’m afraid that he'll use me to do awful things, or hurt people I care about. (4x07)

CALLUM: I don’t know how, but I’m afraid… He’s gonna use me. (6x01)

and with Soren:

SOREN: I know that mirror too well. My father was obsessed with it. […] Callum, I-I know you love magic, but I hope you’re careful. Because it can change people. (4x04)

to

CALLUM: As long as it’s here or anywhere, it poses a threat, because Aaravos can manipulate people on the outside. Like he did with Lord Viren. And me. (6x01)

And, quite frankly, if Aaravos had already used Callum for his intended ultimate purpose, we would’ve seen the Callum pawn intro in S6 (the pawn intro that features the cube, I might add), neither of which have fully come to fruition. So. (But again, more on that later.)

We also have 6x03 directly renew the promise with Rayla’s conversation in Runaan — who in many ways was the embodiment of “upholding your duty to the immense detriment of yourself and everyone else around you” — that Rayla’s promise is going to come back around, and that literally can’t happen unless 1) Callum does dark magic so 2) Aaravos can corrupt/possess him.

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There is very, exceedingly little point to not only repeat a plot beat we’ve already seen in 4x07 just to have Rayla change her answer to the more dramatic, stakes-driven one, reaffirm it in the season finale, and then completely drop it.

This plot thread of the eventual possession fight is also set up through Rayla’s encounters with Esmeray, Runaan, and the idea of monsters/corruption: “[After corruption] what life remains has been twisted into monstrosities” / “I’m a monster!” “You’re not a monster!” “I remember I fought you. I tried to kill you! How could I?” / “You keep calling it a monster.”

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After all, if Rayla can restore their identities to Esmeray and her father… then why not Callum? (“I own you. I control you! Deadwood!” “That’s not my name. My name is Elmer.”) As 6x06 makes sure to tell us, the light-star ritual rids the body of dark magic, but with an added caveat: “But beware: if you ever do dark magic again, the darkness and corruption will overwhelm you.”

There’s also a lot of other reasons this kind of framing for it makes sense for Callum’s arc and the show (which is all about making choices) in particular — but yeah, there’s not a doubt in my mind that Callum is getting possessed in S7 and is doing dark magic again. Even their first scene together in 6x01 with “I heard you were up here losing your mind” which is what literally happens during possession and is a direct parallel to Zubeia’s dark magic corruption (“Infected. Corrupted. I fear I’m losing everything. Losing my mind”).

So let’s talk about something a little less set in stone, which is Callum’s journey to getting there. Specifically:

Love > Mystery

What is the mystery of Aaravos?

Well, there’s a few. There’s his initial motivations, which are now answered thanks to season six. There’s his involvement with dark magic, which will likely be answered in season 7. Callum had the initial mystery of the mirror. Aaravos taunts Sol Regem over “the mystery that has haunted you for a thousand years” in the death/disappearance of his mate. Seasons four and five were dedicated to figuring out the mystery of his prison, though we still likely have more to learn about the imprisonment itself.

However, the mystery we’ve been steadily waiting one since season one is simple:

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For years now, I’d speculated that the Key wasn’t a literal key to Aaravos’ prison (though I hadn’t ruled it out), but something that would be a power up and help restore him to his full abilities. The fact that we now know why and indeed that Aaravos wants it back at all is a beautiful fun bonus in the predictions chart.

The fact that it’s linked to primal magic also makes sense even beyond its design, as the language used to talk about primals is similar to the kind used to describe the cube:

LUJANNE: They have a piece of it inside them. We call that piece an arcanum. It’s like the secret of the primal, or its meaning. That secret becomes a spark. The tiniest flicker of a primal source inside you, but enough to ignite the world with its magic. (2x01)

CALLUM: You don’t control anything. But you already knew that, didn’t you? Because it’s the secret of the Ocean itself. The arcanum. (5x08)

In season 7, Callum is going to inevitably learn (hi Astrid?) that Aaravos is out of his prison and, presumably, the Archmage will be looking for his primal book of destiny. What may happen, then, is a race to get the book first, with the Cube pointing the way seemingly to Elarion, if Callum’s little map in 6x02 is to be believed… or in that general direction, at least.

If Callum can get the book and use the Key with it, he’d solve a big mystery, get a lot of cool primal stuff, and be all geared up to defeat Aaravos while also de-powering the Startouch elf. He doesn’t have to worry about being controlled anymore, but I could see this being the alternative avenue Callum gets obsessed over since it combines 1) his deep desire to learn more primal magic, 2) his love of books, 3) his Key, which he’s wanted to figure out since s2 and is actively working on it (6x02), and 4) his desire to defeat Aaravos and keep the world and everyone else safe.

The Cube’s secrets, the location of the book, the mystery of Primal magic. The mystery of Aaravos.

I don’t think it’s going to be that simple though, seeing as S6 also introduces a small but interesting caveat when it comes to chasing mysteries:

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Anyone who knows me knows that I love Aaravos and Rayla’s foil dynamic and it is persistently one of my favourites, so I was pleasantly surprised when S6 gave it so much direct focus. Rayla being a literal metaphorical star in direct opposition to Aaravos as the Literal Light to Aaravos’ darkness in their dynamics with Callum; 6x09 being about their journeys in processing the loss of family; and of course, the above, with wondrous mysteries paling in comparison to their loved ones (Callum, Rayla; Leola).

Another thing I always thought was interesting was the candle parallel between Aaravos, Rayla, and Callum.

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Upon their (re)entry into Callum’s life, he holds a candle up to both of them. For Aaravos, this remains ‘lit’ and upheld, as Callum spends the two years after his TDP short story, “Inheritance” investigating the secrets of mirror. A mystery that is interrupted and delayed by Rayla’s return, in which Callum holds up another candle (despite having primal magic at his beck and call)… and then lowers it and puts the candle down when he sees that it’s her.

Almost like the mystery of the mirror — of the cube — doesn’t hold a candle to her.

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That the mystery he may become obsessed with in S7 is one he’s ultimately willing to relinquish if it means saving her life.

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Do the right thing. Make the sacrifice.

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This doesn’t rule out Callum delivering the cube under possession (hi pawn intro featuring him pondering it and turning to stone), mind you, nor does it mean Callum can’t reclaim the Cube and use it / the book for good by the end of the season (him reclaiming the cube has always been one of my favourite ideas, mirroring the way he’ll reclaim his identity and agency from Aaravos).

But I do think S6 in this specific vein added interesting precedent to the idea of Love being more important than mysteries, and with Rayla being Callum’s one path, well…

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It’d make a lot of sense, wouldn’t it?

The Greater Good

The “greater good” has always been a loaded concept in TDP, whether it was the singular Magma Titan vs thousands of human lives, or hundreds of people teaming up to defend Zym at the Storm Spire, though rarely spelled out as directly as it was in S6. I want to do a proper meta update on S5 and S6’s continued trolley problems, ideally sooner rather than later, so I’m not going to go as Ham here as I could. That’s said, there’s still plenty to talk about, so let’s get into it.

Season six sees three kind of distinct trolley problems. The first is in discussion only between Callum and Rayla in 6x03 on either end; the second is over Viren and Kpp'Ar regarding the staff (and arguably Lissa as well); and the third with Viren and Soren in Katolis during Sol Regem’s attack.

Obviously the one that is most relevant to this meta is 6x03, but I’d argue it starts a little earlier in the season in both 6x01 and later in 6x05 for our lovebirds, respectively:

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RAYLA: You knew. You knew this was the reward. [Callum nods] Why didn’t you tell me?

CALLUM: Because I know you, Rayla. If I’d told you, you would’ve refused to go, because you never do anything for yourself. So I wanted to do something for yourself for you.

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When it comes to the greater good, Rayla routinely puts it above all else. This is one of her strongest similarities to Viren in Arc 1, who cared about “a bright future for all of humanity” even at the detriment of his own children and all moral standing. Callum, however, in a steady surefire contrast to both of them, puts her and Ezran above anything and everything else, which is exactly why Rayla immediately understands “the issue” after learning about his dark magic use:

RAYLA: Am I supposed to thank you?

CALLUM: No, that’s not what I’m saying. I…

RAYLA: Listen to me. If you ever have to choose between me or the greater good, do the thing thing. Make the sacrifice.

Callum then uses this as leverage, as previously discussed, to get Rayla to agree to his own request to kill him if Aaravos ever takes control of him again. She does, this time, as Callum cites:

CALLUM: You told me to never sacrifice the greater good for one person, no matter who it is, well… You have to promise me something, too.

When a character says something in dialogue (“If you must make a choice [between Soren and egg / 'the world’], choose the egg”), particularly when it comes to making a choice, that inevitably means they are going to be presented with that situation and have to make a choice. If a character is told not to do something, or says they will never do something (“I don’t do dark magic. I will never help you”), they will almost inevitably always end up eventually doing so. This isn’t always true, of course, in TDP or otherwise, but it is still a general setup rule of thumb.

So Callum is going to be pushed into an avenue where he has to pick between the greater good or Rayla, likely in the vein of helping Aaravos or losing her, and he’s going to pick helping Aaravos to save her. This may mean handing over that damn cube (meta on that specifically to follow) or, at bare minimum, doing dark magic knowing it’ll mean corrupting himself (self sacrifice) and subsequently turning himself over into Aaravos’ will of chaos (sacrificing the greater good) knowing the consequences will be disastrous.

Because he would do anything for her, and that includes sacrificing his life, his agency (“That’s the dark magic you want. Just let her go” / “Finnegrin was going to kill you. I didn’t have a choice”), the world (“Tell me she wasn’t your world”), and becoming a 'monster’.

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He’ll be saved, of course. I think S7 will actually end quite well for Callum — freed from Aaravos’ possession forever, reconciled with his brother, happy with Rayla, reclaiming his cube and possibly learning from Aaravos’ book of primal magic, etc. The road to get there is just going to be hell, first.

This conflict of greater good vs personal attachments though, while present in Callum’s arc (choosing Ez over Harrow in 1x03; Rayla over his morals in 2x07; Rayla over his safety in 5x08, etc), is likewise at its most prevalent in Rayla’s arc, so let’s talk about it.

Love > Duty

Ehasz: Lain and Tiadrin, and Runaan and Ethari, as the parents of Rayla, represent the forces that are at war within her between duty and love. Her biological parents left her out of duty and Runaan and Ethari raised her out of love. Think about how she left Callum; she chose duty over love. Now she’s choosing love over duty, and we’ll see this conflict within her manifest again.

So. Rayla “never [does] anything for herself,” by Callum’s own admission. She’s agreed to murder her boyfriend if he’s ever possessed again. She refused to purposefully help her family until everything with Aaravos was resolved (6x01, 6x05: “Just wait a little longer, okay?”). Her core conflict has routinely been Love vs Duty (“My heart for Xadia), often to her detriment when she chooses duty over love.

While in some ways her heart has been hardened more than it was in arc 1 ("We can’t save everyone, Soren”), in others, she’s never been softer and more hopeful (“I’m your daughter and I need you”). After all, while I see Rayla herself as Callum’s one truth, if we read it as Love (in general), than that makes her the physical/visual embodiment of Love in his life, and well…

As the most Moonshadow elf to ever Moonshadow, Runaan was, in a lot of ways, the embodiment of duty in S1. He fought his daughter and “tried to kill” her in an effort to maintain his oath as a Moonshadow elf and honour his position as troupe leader. He was prepared to possibly take her life, as “we take it, but we do not take it lightly.” He refused to listen.

I think the fact that he’s remorseful as all hell in S6, then, bodes very well for the future. Not only does his fight with Rayla foreshadow multiple elements of her fight with Callum—identity, corruption, “I know you’re still in there! I’m not letting you go!"—but if he embodies the remorse of duty, and Rayla embodies the persistence and forgiveness of love, well…

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Love wins over duty.

This is symbolized, too, as the parallels between Rayla’s assassin binding—a solemn vow and threat of punishment if she failed in her duty, which Callum’s act of love (smashing the primal stone to save Zym) allowed her to be free of—and the bracelet/binding that Callum gifts her explicitly out of his love and care for her. The first binding a reminder that as an assassin, she was "already dead” vs one that will help her come back to him.

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This follows through on what season hammers home, which is that Rayla (and the world around her) is at its best when acting in accordance with her big heart. The prophecy and reason dictated that to kill the icy monster was the best route forward, but her heart saw otherwise (“I know in my heart. You have to trust me”) and allowed her to connect and literally help repair/illuminate Esmeray’s broken heart by gifting the moon opal. Her love, not her fierce devotion to duty, is Callum’s guiding star (“Rayla is kind and good” / “You have true courage, and a big heart” / “Rayla is selfless, strong, and caring. That’s what makes her a hero. That’s what makes her Rayla.” / “I understand now. Your kindness pierced her heart and melted the threat” / “Yours is a wondrous heart”).

Runaan taught her to never break her promises (6x09) as part of being a Moonshadow elf and a good assassin, but breaking her promise (“Before I met you, I swore an oath, to end Prince Ezran’s life”) and indeed sparing Marcos was one of the best, most crucial things she’s ever done. Since we know Callum won’t sacrifice her, we can also be sure — especially after her victories with Runaan and Esmeray — that she won’t sacrifice him. Runaan broke his promise to Ethari, inadvertently abandoning his lover for two years over something that was ultimately harmful and unnecessary (sound familiar), and it makes me wonder if Runaan will support Rayla choosing love over duty, and mutually learning from their own mistakes in doing the opposite.

There’s also the fact that sometimes, breaking a promise would be a good thing, as showcased in prior seasons:

SOREN: Of course we can [capture the boys]. We promised Dad. (2x07)

CLAUDIA: Aaravos followed through on everything he said he was going to do to save my dad. And I promised to help free him. (6x04)

Conclusion: Sacrifice

Where a lot of these points meet, though, especially for the intersection of love and duty, is at the point of Sacrifice. We see this smattered throughout the season, both directly in dialogue

CALLUM: You told me to never sacrifice the greater good for one person, no matter who it is. Well, you have to promise me something too. (6x03)

VIREN: And even if I could, oh, the sacrifice is unthinkable. The spell requires a human heart. (6x08)

and more indirectly but still very prominently through action: Claudia killing/suffering through the physical and emotional ordeal of killing Sir Sparklepuff (“It… It’s love!” “It’s too much to ask. It hurts to see you like this); Viren regretting how he handled things with Lissa and then afterwards with Soren because "the cost was devastating. Your mother left us”; and of course in Callum and Rayla’s argument in 6x03 over Callum’s willingness to destroy and hurt himself in order to protect Rayla, who’s done the same thing many times over, just in leaving or using herself as a shield.

“We must be ready to sacrifice, even the things we love” (3x03) when it comes to duty. We must likewise be willing to sacrifice things, such as duty, safety, ego/pride, morality, or your life, in the name of love. Sacrifice — dark magic, of what are you willing to trade or kill or sacrifice in exchange for your aims or protective desires — is then accordingly, the theme of Book Seven: Dark, and one that both Callum and Rayla will have to confront.

Luckily, Callum is consistent and enduring — and Rayla is true hearted and growing — enough to do the Right Thing, and make the choice they’ve ultimately, routinely, always made: each other.

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So long as she’s Rayla — brave, selfless, loving — he can be Callum, and so long as he’s Callum — resourceful, persistent, loving — she can be Rayla. Not a dark mage forcing her to be an assassin, but two people who bring out the best in one another.

And in doing so, in choosing to save rather than sacrifice each other, they get to likewise save, love, and preserve themselves.