Richeh is the quietest of Qifrey''s four apprentices — short, bangs hiding her eyes, usually sitting alone, lost in her own thoughts. When Coco, Agott and Tetia are mid-debate, Richeh is easy to forget; then in some later scene she says exactly the line that was needed.
What sets her apart
Richeh''s approach to magic is unlike the others: she doesn''t love magic, she loves drawing. She''s less an apprentice than an artist; for her, drawing sigils is the end, not the means. That stance creates friction with the atelier''s discipline — exams want performance from her, but she gives them sincerity instead.
As a character, she uses direct language. Says little; what she says is final. That doesn''t make her the story''s "feelings-explainer" — quite the opposite, she''s the one whose feelings are never described.
She doesn''t want to go home; her relationship with her family is one of the arcs the story slowly opens. The atelier is shelter — a child who chose to be like family with the other apprentices.
Her place in the story
Richeh embodies the show''s "magic as art" thesis. Coco represents invention; Agott represents technique; Tetia represents joy; Richeh represents the art itself — the moment process becomes its own value.
Being small, she slips out of view in classroom scenes; in the show''s critical moments, her observational power is what solves the problem. One of the manga''s most quietly rewarding character builds.
Tracking on Episodo
Richeh appears in every episode but in small quantities — easy to miss. With the Episodo extension installed, the detail page''s comments section often flags which episodes carry her beats; the community marks them regularly.





