TV-Series
Description
Yvette L. Lehrman, a mage from the Lehrman lineage renowned for crafting artificial Mystic Eyes, trains under Lord El-Melloi II while openly serving as a spy for the Neutral Faction’s Meluastea group. Her role as an informant bridges factional divides, exploiting her academic position to trade secrets. Inheriting her family’s gem-cutting mastery, she houses interchangeable artificial Mystic Eyes within her right eye socket, hidden beneath a star-shaped eyepatch. These include malachite for Emotion Sight, ruby for Flame, iolite for leyline detection, and gold for Compulsion, supplemented by others from her collection.

Pink hair fading to purple tips and sweet lolita attire define her flamboyant aesthetic, contrasting sharply with the Clock Tower’s austerity. Her provocative demeanor extends to playful overtures toward Lord El-Melloi II, feigning romantic pursuit to unsettle him, and prodding classmates like Gray to provoke emotional reactions.

In the Mystic Eyes Collection Train crisis, Yvette repairs the Rail Zeppelin’s damaged leyline using her Flame Eyes to incinerate vampiric flora and pinpoint energy nodes. Though partnered with pragmatists like Karabo Frampton and Melvin Weins, she balances eccentricity with tactical focus to ensure mission success. Post-incident, El-Melloi II recruits her to probe the Department of Modern Magecraft and Clock Tower archives, capitalizing on her observational acuity and factional access. Her Emotion Sight exposes deception in encounters with figures like Rufleus Eulyphis and Heartless’s agents.

Adapting eight artificial Mystic Eyes required radical neural alterations that endanger sanity, yet Yvette’s psyche remains unnervingly intact—a testament to her resilience. El-Melloi II later mentors her in refining a volatile magecraft technique mimicking the Rail Zeppelin’s Mystic Eye Projector: a concentrated ocular beam powerful enough to disable her Eyes temporarily, albeit at physical cost.

During the Snowfield Holy Grail War in *Fate/strange Fake*, the El-Melloi Classroom enlists her expertise but denies her Command Spells, distrusting her penchant for capricious betrayals. This cements her reputation as a cunning but unpredictable asset.

Yvette’s persona merges theatrical deceit with sporadic authenticity, particularly when engaging fellow strategists like Melvin Weins. This ambiguity obscures her genuine intentions, rendering her a paradox where performance and selfhood indistinguishably intertwine.