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Magic spells!

Mélusine is a Franco-Belgian Black Comedy Fantasy comic by artist Clarke and writer Gilson, about the young witch Mélusine, who lives in a Haunted Castle as a sort of au pair or maid, while studying magic at a witch's school. She splits her time fairly equally between doing trivial chores, performing bizarre magics of varying usefulness, hanging out with other witches and supernatural beings, and trying to escape being burned at the stake by the religious zealots down at the local village.

Other important characters in the comic include:

  • Count Gonzaga Hernyvanz, lord of the Haunted Castle, usually just called "Master" or "Sir" by Mélusine. He's an Affably Evil vampire who's usually easy enough to get along with, but sometimes his cravings for blood get the better of him.
  • Duchess Aymée Döperzonn, Master's wife and usually just called "Madam". She's a non-corporeal ghost and in Mélusine's opinion a bit of a slave driver.
  • Winston, the castle manservant. He's a parody of Frankenstein's Monster who enjoys eating cats and usually only grunts instead of speaking.
  • Adrazelle, Mélusine's nutty old aunt, who lives in a cottage near the castle and often stops by to see her niece.
  • Mélisande, Mélusine's ditzy cousin, who is a good fairy. Since the rest of the family are witches, she's regarded as the Black Sheep of the family.
  • Cancrelune, Mélusine's classmate and best friend at the witch's school. She's a dimwitted and ugly klutz who often annoys Mélusine with her screw-ups, but she means well.
  • Krapella ("Gothika" in Cinebook's English translation), another classmate and friend of Mélusine, more of a Hot Witch and party girl.
  • The Werewolf, the closest thing Mélusine has to a boyfriend. He only sees her during the full moon, though, mostly because while his werewolf form is tall and impressive, his human form is a small, ugly weakling that he doesn't want Mélusine to see.
  • Mister Haaselblatt, the most prominent of the teachers at the witch's school. He's a short-tempered and not particularly encouraging teacher who is often outsmarted by Mélusine.
  • Doctor Kartoffeln, a German Mad Scientist who moves into Master's castle in the eleventh album and remains a permanent guest as well as a teacher at the witch's school. His great-grandfather was the creator of Winston.
  • The village pastor, the leader of the group of villagers who keep trying to burn Mélusine and any other witches they might encounter at the stake.

Mélusine started out as a feature in the Spirou magazine back in 1992, and in 1995 the first album came out. Like many other Franco-Belgian comics of the type, Mélusine started out mostly telling simple one-page gag stories, but after a time expanded to tell longer stories as well, and several of the albums have a theme or overarching meta-plot that ties even the shorter gag stories together, like album 9 having the witches studying for their hypnosis exam, or album 15 has Mélusine taking care of her bratty niece Malicella. After Gilson's departure, Clarke stepped in as the writer and the series took a 360° turn in terms of direction: the stories stopped being one-page gags and relying on Black Comedy and became album-length.

At the time of writing, Dupuis has published 27 Mélusine albums. Five of them have been released in English by Cinebook.

Now with a character page.


Mélusine provides examples of:

  • Abhorrent Admirer: In the early albums, the Mummy living in the Castle obstinately tries to woo Mélusine. She's seriously annoyed by him.
  • The Ace: Mélusine, in school. She's top of the class and effortlessly breezes through all her school assignments. This does not mean that she's popular with the teachers, though; generally her magic works too well, and the teacher ends up injured or humiliated. Her statue as Ace doesn't extend beyond the school setting; while she is a talented and powerful witch, she's got a tendency not to not think ahead, which usually results in disaster.
  • Ambiguous Time Period: It's uncertain just when the comic is supposed to take place. The settings suggest Dark Age Europe, but there are several references to more modern time periods, such as a door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesman that shows up in one early strip, and Mélusine getting the weather forecast and TV commercials on her crystal ball in another. Doctor Kartoffeln is the biggest source of modern-day references; he uses modern medicine, tries to have electricity installed in the castle, and at one point asks Mélusine where the telephone is (which she doesn't understand). It's never made clear whether these things are just jokes, or if the series actually takes place in modern times and Mélusine's country is just incredibly behind the times.
  • Allegedly Dateless: Mélusine can't find a lover despite having many suitors. The same goes for Cancrelune because of her looks. However, Mélusine does get a boyfriend for good later in the series.
  • Anti-Magic: The village pastor once captures Mélusine inside a circle of ash, which neutralizes all of her magical powers and act as an invisible barrier. Problem: she still has her witch's broom with her, and just use it to sweep the ash.
  • Art Shift: Whenever Cancrelune tells a story, we'll get crudely drawn images of the characters and the text will always be full of typos.
  • Ascended Extra: Mélisande didn't appear until Volume 7 (which coincidentally was the first album that Cinebook translated to English), and while she fairly quickly established herself as one of the most prominent recurring guest characters, it took some time before she truly became part of the main cast. After Cancrelune's death in Volume 22, Mélisande pretty much takes over her role as Mélusine's best friend and most constant companion, to the point where she even enrolls in the witch's school.
  • Badass Bookworm: Mélusine is well-read and studious, and she's seriously dangerous to tick off.
  • Ball of Light Transformation: Fairies like Mélisande can turn into a small ball of light. Mélisande mostly uses it when needing to fly faster than with her fairy wings. Notably, on her first appearance in the comic, Mélusine confuses her for a firefly and catches her in a glass jar. Also of note, when Mélisande uses it to sneak into Mister Haaselblatt's office after being egged on by the other witch's school students.
  • Bedsheet Ghost: Although other types of ghosts can be found in the Haunted Castle, Mélusine finds out that the bedsheet kind is common when woken up by several haunting her bedroom (probably because she Sleeps in the Nude). They promptly flee when she threatens to exorcise them... including the one she was unwittingly using as bedsheet.
  • Beware the Nice Ones:
    • Mélusine is a kind and helpful girl, and mostly uses her witch powers to heal commoners or create love potions. But push her too far and she can get nasty, casting hexes and curses as readily as any Wicked Witch.
    • Mélisande has traces of this too, but not as strongly.
  • Bewitched Amphibians: With all the witches around, of course some people turning into amphibians is bound to happen.
    • In fact, the very first spell Mélusine is seen to use is changing the Master into a toad, to demonstrate her powers to his wife.
    • There is one drunkard who gets into the habit of antagonizing Adrazelle, so that she'd turn him into a frog — which allows him to swim through the river separating his house from the tavern. He then looks for a maiden (usually Mélusine) to kiss and return to human form.
    • A peasant is depressed because he's been dumped, and he ends up insulting Mélusine because she's not helping enough. She turns him into a seductive toad, who attracts plenty female toads.
    • Also, the fate awaiting any boy getting too forward toward Mélusine and kissing her without her consent.
      Frog: [to another frog] Welcome to the club.
    • Even Mélusine's classmates aren't safe if she's in a really bad mood. When Gothika accidentally drops ink on Mélusine's test copy, she finds herself changed into a toad — like the rest of the class (even Cancrelune).
    • Mélusine herself, soon followed by Cancrelune, are changed into toads by Malicella doing a demonstration of her powers. And unfortunately, the younger witch has no idea how to revert it (good thing Aunt Adrazelle does).
    • In "Hypnosis", Mélusine is looking for a Prince Charming to go to a ball. She believes she's in luck when meeting with a talking frog, and promptly kisses it... only to find out it was a cursed princess, to her dismay.
  • Big Eater:
    • Mélisande is constantly hungry and eats sugary treats all the time, and yet she never gains any weight.
    • Pirouline is also presented as this, though considering that she's a Struggling Single Mother and her child is a nightmare to raise, it's justifiable.
  • Black Comedy: There's a lot of death and misery in the comics, and several of the stories have downright Downer Endings... but it's all played for laughs.
  • Bratty Half-Pint: Most of the children who show up in the comic are this, though the Master's nephew Globule and Mélusine's niece Malicella are the biggest examples. Malicella is a particularly bratty example who stomps on people's feet when she doesn't get her way.
  • Broken Aesop: There are two in War Without Magic:
    • War has erupted between Witches and Dwarves against Fairies and the Chinese community. At the end of the conflict, Mélusine makes a passionate speech that everyone has put aside their differences and worked together to end the war. Except, she omitted the Dwarves from her speech, though in truth, they didn't do anything meaningful to resolve the war.
    • The next day, Mélusine's teacher was moved by her words of wisdom and bestow her the title of graduate witch, saying she has nothing new to teach her. Mélusine's friends take her to a lake to celebrate her graduation. However, Mathys, the student everyone bullied and whose magic was the only one functioning isn't among her band of friends.
  • Burn the Witch!: Even though Mélusine is generally trying to help the local villagers with her magic, a group of them are always trying to subject her to this. The pastor is the most persistent of them.
  • The Bus Came Back: In War Without Magic, Cancrelune comes back to the living as a ghost and helps Mélusine without being seen. After giving a smile to her from afar she leaves, presumably back to Hell.
  • Captain Crash: On a broomstick, no less. Cancrelune is terrible at flying, and doesn't land her broomstick so much as she crashes it. In the early strips Aunt Adrazelle also had this tendency, but in her case it was because she tended to forget that windows had glass in them nowadays and kept trying to fly through closed windows. The shtick of crashing through windows was later transferred to Cancrelune, who is just an absent-minded klutz.
  • Cerebus Retcon: A lot of Mélisande's early appearances get a lot of humor out of how she is the only fairy in a family of witches and as such considered an embarrassment and a Black Sheep whom Mélusine finds horribly annoying and Aunt Adrazelle apparently didn't even know about. These strips become less funny and more tragic with the revelation that Mélisande is actually Mélusine's twin sister and their mother Sigrid is a fairy. Sigrid fell in love with a handsome warlock named Kaspar, but since mixed marriages between witches and fairies aren't really accepted, they pretended that Sigrid was a witch so they would be allowed to get married. When Mélusine and Mélisande were born, Mélisande so obviously took after her mother that Sigrid's true nature would have been discovered if they'd kept her. Hence, they had to give Mélisande up for adoption, and while Mélusine stayed with her parents and was reared as a witch, Mélisande was reared as a fairy and passed off as Mélusine's "cousin". Aunt Adrazelle knew the truth the whole time but kept quiet about it in order not to give Sigrid away.
  • Cerebus Syndrome: While the comic never shied away from the dark and edgy, it generally played such things for laughs. In the later albums, after Gilson left the series and Clarke took over as writer as well as artist, stories started to get longer and less comedic, with things that had been previously played for laughs being played more seriously. Word of God is that the one-page gag stories are done, and in their place are album-length adventures.
  • Character Development: During Mélisande's debut story, Mélusine is shown to dislike her. At the end, they parted ways in more amicable terms. As the series progress, Mélusine has grown close to her and even more when they are revealed to be siblings.
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome:
    • The Mummy who lives in the castle and who often hits on Mélusine, was a semi-prominent recurring character in the early albums, but was soon reduced to only background cameos, before vanishing altogether.
    • Doctor Kartoffeln's Right-Hand Hottie Rosaria and his Stuffy Brit butler Nestor didn't last long as characters. Nestor was only in a few strips, and while Rosaria lasted slightly longer, she vanished without a trace after first having been turned into a vampire by the Master and then bitten by the Werewolf.
    • The village pastor is seen less and less as the series moves on.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Mélisande. Combined with low intelligence, a distracted mind and Literal-Minded, Mélisande can't understand a simple greeting phrase and seems warped in her own universe.
  • Cordon Bleugh Chef: Aunt Adrazelle, who cooks and enjoys meals like spider pâté and toad soup, and whose coffee is so strong it's near undrinkable to anyone else.
  • Cosmic Plaything: Cancrelune gets no respect from anyone or anything, being the butt of everyone' jokes or cruelties. Even though Mélusine is her best and only friend, she too plays some pranks on her from time to time.
  • Covers Always Lie: The 13th album "Superstitions" shows Mélusine holding garlic and a horseshoe against a terrifying monster, implying she's the superstitious one. Upon reading this, it turns out it's Cancrelune who is extremely superstitious.
  • Death Montage: In the 16th album, Mélusine visits a cliff that's said to be cursed after a princess threw herself to the sea when her father hanged her lover. What follows is a series of gags where Mélusine tries (unsuccessfully) to save the pour unfortunate souls who were hit by the curse from commiting suicide.
  • The Ditz: Cancrelune is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. Mélisande isn't even a spoon. When the two get together, it inevitably leads to a lot of Comically Missing the Point and a major headache for Mélusine.
  • Dub Name Change:
    • Krapella was renamed "Gothika" in the English translation, for... obvious reasons.
    • Mélusine was also renamed "Mélisande" in the dutch translation. When Mélisande was introduced, she was renamed "Mélusine" resulting in the cousins having switched names.
  • Dumb Blonde: Candrelune has blonde hair and is as smart as a bag of rocks.
  • Dumb Is Good: Mélisande is a total idiot, but she's also sweet, sympathetic and totally lacking in guile or malice, her main vices being a tendency towards childishness and being Innocently Insensitive.
  • Explosive Results: Brewing potions will sometime lead to explosions with the frequent victim being Cancrelune.
  • Facepalm: Mélusine will do this whenever Cancrelune or Mélisande have done something stupid.
  • Fairy Sexy: Mélisande is just as gorgeous and shapely as her Hot Witch cousin Mélusine.
  • Flying Broomstick: The standard transportation method for all the witches, of course; the witch's school curriculum even includes broomstick lessons. Cancrelune is very bad at flying one, though. Since Mélusine is employed as a maid in the Haunted Castle, she also often uses her broom for the task it was designed for.
  • Foil: Cancrelune is everything Mélusine isn't: she's terrible at school, her spellcasting always go wary, her potions always blow up and she can't fly on a broom without crashing. Plus she's ugly while Mélusine is gorgeous.
  • Frivolous Summoning: The witches in this setting have a bad habit of this.
    • An early strip has Mélusine getting frustrated by a summoning spell not working well enough, and finally calling a powerful demonic spirit by literally throwing everything she has in her cauldron... only to ask him to help finding a pair of earrings she lost.
    • In Inferno, Mélusine and her aunt Adrazelle are seen summoning undead, ghosts and demons in a complex ritual sequence... to serve as pieces for a life-sized chess game.
  • Gone Horribly Right:
    • When Mélusine's magic experiments and assignments fail, it's usually because they work too well, or on a larger scale than she'd intended it.
    • A good part of an album was dedicated to this. Mélusine is desperate for a date. Rather than finding one, she cast a spell that will bring one to her. Problem is, EVERYBODY in the country ends up being enthralled by her spell, males and females.
  • Gonk: Cancrelune is not a Hot Witch like Mélusine or Gothika.
  • Hope Spot: After Cancrelune committed suicide, Mélusine goes to Hell to bring her soul back with Mélisande and Adrazelle's help. The long journey was filled with demons and dangers. After Mélusine found her soul, Cancrelune refused to return back to the living, "saying what's done is done". She thanked Mélusine for being her friend and disappeared in the shadows, leaving Mélusine in a broken mess.
  • Hot Witch:
    • Gothika is beautiful and wears a typical witch hat, a bra, a miniskirt, fishnet stockings, heels, and her attire is completely in black.
    • When Mélisande is bitten by a vampire in a gag. She slowly turns evil and switches to witchcraft. She also changes her fairy attire to a witch hat, a cape, a leotard, high-heel boots, all in black. This is temporary however, as Mélusine cures her back to normal much to Mélisande's dismay, who started to enjoy being evil.
  • Hulk Speak: On the rare occasions when Winston actually speaks instead of just grunting, he uses this.
  • Hurt Foot Hop: Malicella, Mélusine's bratty niece, absolutely loves to stomp on people's feet to show her rebellious side, making them hop in pain. She not only does this repeatedly to Mélusine, but also to Cancrelune, Dr. Kartoffeln and the Master. Though Malicella hits a snag when she tries to do the same to Madam, who's a ghost with Fog Feet, and ends up bawling out in frustration.
  • Hypocrite: The village pastor trying to burn Mélusine for witchcraft has sometimes recourse to some anti-witch tricks that can seem very similar to standard sorcery at a glance. This has backfired on him at least once, with the superstitious villagers tying him up at the stake instead of Mélusine.
  • Hypocritical Humor: Mélusine has a disagreement with her cousin Mélisande. Mélisande leave to clear her head and Mélusine muses how pathetic fairy magic is. She then start having fun playing with Mélisande's magic wand and conjure pastries and cute furry animals. When Mélisande comes back and catches her, Mélusine sheepishly tries to pass it off as scientific curiosity.
  • Identical Panel Gag: One page in book 5 shows Mélusine preparing a philter of forgetfulness, which accidentally boils and sprays vapor in the room. The first and last panels are absolutely identical, with Mélusine pondering, "What was I doing, again?"
  • Inept Mage: When Cancrelune successfully cast a spell it's the exception, not the rule. And even when she succeeds, it will always be subverted one way or another.
  • Innocently Insensitive: Mélisande has an unfortunate tendency for this. She never means to be hurtful, but can accidentally cause quite a few hurt feelings because she's thoughtless.
  • Interspecies Romance:
    • Mélusine and the Werewolf almost have something like this going on. While she doesn't really see him as a liable romantic option (it's hard to commit when she can only see him once a month), they have gone out on the very occasional date, and she has even kissed him on a couple of occasions.
    • Turns out that Mélusine's parents, Kaspar and Sigrid, are an example. Sigrid is actually a fairy, but pretended to be a witch because mixed marriages were looked down upon.
  • I Was Quite a Looker: If Aunt Adrazelle's (somewhat vulgar) stories are to be believed, she was hot in her youth.
  • Killed Off for Real: Cancrelune in album 22, which really cements the comic's Cerebus Syndrome.
  • The Klutz: Cancrelune is incredibly accident-prone, and nowhere near pretty enough to qualify as a Cute Clumsy Girl.
  • Knife Outline: The cooking teacher Charles Rimbaut, doing a demonstration of proper knife use, pins down Mélusine to a door with height knives as she is trying to slip away.
  • Lethal Chef: To her annoyance, despite being a decent potion-maker Mélusine is not good at cooking. It becomes a double annoyance when witch's school starts including cooking classes, and those are the only classes she doesn't ace.
  • Literal Metaphor: The village pastor, thinking he finally caught Mélusine for good, tells her, "If you escape me this time, I'll eat my cassock!" Mélusine does escape and, being a helpful girl, turns him into a moth (but sparing his cassock) so he can uphold his vow.
  • Meaningful Name: Cancrelune translates to "Dunce-Moon". She certainly is a dunce, especially academically.
  • Monster Mash: From the get-go, the castle where the eponymous witch works. The Master is a vampire, his wife is a ghost, the majordomo Winston is a Frankenstein monster, and the place hosts a mummy, animated armors, plenty other ghosts (mostly of the bedsheet kind) and various other undead and monsters. Plus, Mélusine is dating a werewolf, and her aunt Adrazelle is a Witch Classic. Later in the series, Doctor Kartoffeln adds a Mad Scientist to the mix.
  • Morphic Resonance: Mélusine is once seen turned into a cat. A black-and-green stripped cat, which are the colors of her usual clothes.
  • Ms. Fanservice:
    • Gothika, with her Stripperiffic version of a witch's outfit and generally sexy poses. (One story reveals that Mélusine wouldn't mind dressing like her, but she catches colds too easily.)
    • Mélusine occasionally gets in on the act, though she's more of a Reluctant Fanservice Girl, whereas Gothika is a Shameless Fanservice Girl.
  • Mystical White Hair: Mélisande is a stereotypical fairy and has short white hair.
  • Nice Girl: For all her personality quirks, Mélisande is very pleasant to deal with.
  • Nipple and Dimed: Averted; Mélusine's nipples are sometimes visible. This isn't actually unusual for Franco-Belgian comics compared to North-American comics aimed at the same age demographic.
  • Non-Standard Character Design: Some monsters are drawn by guest artists and have a noticeably different style. (For example, one by Midam which looks like it just escaped from Kid Paddle.)
  • Only Friend: Cancrelune is shooed by everyone because of her lack of smart and clumsiness. Mélusine is her only friend and the only one who care about her.
  • Outdoor Bath Peeping: Mélusine sometimes goes for a swim in natural bodies of water, so it can happen.
    • For example in book 16, the Master is firmly planning to join Mélusine, Cancrelune, Gothika and Mélisande skinny-dipping in the pond next to the castle. Problem is, it's a warm and sunny day and he's a vampire, so he can only get out in a full diving suit to avoid Suicide by Sunlight.
    • In book 20, a Knight Errant on a vaguely draconic mount catches Mélusine bathing in a pond. The knight apologizes, saying that her virtue is safe with him, as all he wants to do is drench the thirst of his steed. However, the weird beast starts emptying all the water with its snout, leaving a rather miffed Mélusine standing naked in the now-empty pond.
  • Perpetually Protean: Book 22 introduces a shapeshifter as Mélusine's lawyer. Because it has a cold, though, it Involuntary Shapeshifts every time it sneezes, cycling from a duck-headed humanoid to a filing cabinet, an octopus, a puddle of water, a giant mushroom, a bugbear, a giant snail, a scarecrow, a shark, an ogre, a werewolf, etc.
  • Pink Means Feminine: Mélisande wears a pink dress and is very girly. Being a fairy helps.
  • Pull a Rabbit out of My Hat:
    • One the cover of book 7, "Hocus Pocus", Mélisande is making a rabbit appear out of a top hat... while Mélusine is pulling a dragon from the other end of the hat.
    • In book 8, "Halloween", Pr. Haaselblatt is seen pulling a rabbit out of his wizard hat. It's actually Mélusine in a magical disguise doing a "terror exercise", and it certainly works at horrifying the real Haaselblatt.
  • Put on a Bus to Hell: Cancrelune committing suicide and ending up in Hell because suicide is a sin. She even refuse Mélusine' offer to return to the living.
  • Really 700 Years Old: Witches and fairies are very long-lived. Mélusine and Mélisande are both 119 years old, but look and act like teenagers. Adrazelle, who looks and acts like an elderly lady in her sixties, is 542. And Malicella, who is 112, looks and acts like a bratty preteen.
  • Redhead In Green: Mélusine is red-haired, and her standard outfit is mostly green (dress, hat and shoes) with some black underneath.
  • Running Gag: A couple.
    • Mélusine acing her magic test but ending up getting the rest of the class cancelled because her spell works too well.
    • Almost as often: Cancrelune messing up her magic test so badly that class ends up getting cancelled because the teacher is in too much pain to continue.
    • Cancrelune's abysmal broomstick flying and her tendency to crash through Mélusine's window.
    • The Master accidentally being exposed to sunlight and crumbling to dust and coming back unscathed the next time.
    • Mélusine dreaming or daydreaming about a romance with a handsome knight or prince, only to have reality intrude on her dreams in an unsettling way.
    • Cancrelune's Stylistic Suck fantasy sequences, which always look like they were colored in crayon and have a ton of spelling mistakes.
    • Mélusine Got Volunteered by the other students when the teacher is asking someone for a dangerous mission.
    • Mélusine can't get a date despite her good looks and her being magical prodigy.
  • Separated at Birth: Mélusine and Mélisande are not cousins, but twins. Their father was a witch and their mother a faerie. Because such marriage was taboo between both communities, their mother pass as a witch. The birth of Mélisande was problematic because she look exactly like a faerie. To maintain the charade, she was given to adoption to the faeries. Adrazelle was the only who knew.
  • "Shaggy Dog" Story: Mélusine goes on a quest to find a legendary and powerful ancient scroll. The road is filled with monsters and dangers. After a long and difficult journey, Mélusine finally reaches her goal. She casts the spell inscribed on the scroll to learn its mysterious powers. She finds out it's a teleport spell that instantly bring her back home.
  • Shapeshifting Excludes Clothing: Mostly averted; the witches' transformations, both willful and forced, generally includes clothing. In one case, however, Mélusine transforms the village pastor (who's always trying to burn her at the stake) into a moth, and his cassock stays behind. This is because, just earlier, he vowed to eat his own cassock if she escaped him once again; Mélusine, nice girl she is, thus makes it possible for him to uphold that vow.
  • Shot in the Ass: Happens to Cancrelune when she flies over a swamp during duck-hunting season.
  • Shout-Out:
    • The Smurfs are mentioned surprisingly often in this comic. For example, Adrazelle is 542, just like Papa Smurf. They're also part of Mélusine's "nightmares" (along with a Galaxian).
    • Mélisande, when practicing magic, tends to use the phrase "Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo!", and several of her appearances include allusions to classic Disney movies. At one point, when Mélusine tries out her wand she accidentally summons Snow White and Dopey.
    • The cover for L'Année du Dragon is a clear homage to the cover for Tintin: The Blue Lotus. With a bit of a reference to Blake and Mortimer's The Yellow M added with Mélusine's posture.
  • Signature Headgear:
    • Mélusine, of course, has her green-and-black witch hat. She only parts from it for bathing or sleeping.
    • Mélisande always wears a typical cone-shaped fairy hat.
  • Sleeps in the Nude: Mélusine always slept naked in the comic's early days; however during one of her first nights spent in the Haunted Castle, she finds out that several Bedsheet Ghosts like to haunt her bedroom — including one she is unwittingly using as bed sheet. Small wonder that, later in the series, she tends to wear a nightgown to bed... but she doesn't always.
  • Sleepyhead: Mélusine has the bad habit of frequently working too late at night on her magic lessons, resulting in her dozing off easily during the day. Often when she's doing her job of cleaning up the castle, to Madam's annoyance. This once accidentally helps Cancrelune: she's supposed to demonstrate a hypnotism spell before the class, with Mélusine as subject; Mélusine just slumps asleep by herself, and the professor compliments a confused Cancrelune.
  • Sugar Bowl: The Fairy land is like this. It's filled with giant cake-like houses, lots of giant candies with pink as the dominant color everywhere.
  • Supreme Chef: In addition to her cupcakes, Mélisande can conjure any food at will with her magic and not just pastries. At one time, her magic fails and she starts baking a cake.
  • Sweet Tooth: Mélisande, being a fairy, really likes sweets. Her Trademark Favorite Food is cupcakes, but anything sweet will do. It's hinted a couple of times that that she needs sugar for her brain to function, and the reason why she's such a ditz is because she's often low on sugar.
  • Toilet Humor: On the 24th album, Mélisande is forced to carry a giant lizard that tends... to leave its mark behind.
  • Ungrateful Bastard: Several of the villagers helped by Mélusine end up trying to burn her at the stake for witchcraft after she's used magic to fix their problems.
  • Unholy Matrimony: It varies from day to day whether Master and Madam have this, or an Awful Wedded Life. Of course they bicker Like an Old Married Couple, because... they're an old married couple... and sometimes they don't seem to like each other very much. But on occasion you do see signs that they care for each other.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: Downplayed, but still noticeable in Mélusine's relationships with both Cancrelune and Mélisande. She does love them both, she really does, but that doesn't stop her from finding them both extremely frustrating and annoying, and she can get downright petty while dealing with them.
  • Wham Episode:
    • Album 22. The Status Quo Is God is forever broken when Cancrelune died by suicide. Even a rescue journey through hell fails to bring her back. Easily the most shocking and darkest moment of the series who is primarily known for comedy.
    • Album 26. Mélusine and Mélisande are revealed to be twin sisters, not cousins. Their mother is also a Fairie in disguise, not a Witch. This leads to war between Witches and Fairies.
  • Wild Magic: Mélusine's niece Malicella is a witch too, but because of her young age the effects of her spells, whether transformation or summoning, are rather random; she usually just pretends after the fact that the result was what she intended to do. She also has no clue how to revert her enchantments, and starts asking Mélusine to teach her how to control her magic.
  • The Witch Hunter: The village pastor, to the point where he spends much more time trying to trap Mélusine than he does being a priest.

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