
| Status | Deceased |
| Alias | Mordred LaFey II (See Below) Detective Reverend Marshall Jackson (pseudonym in “Finding a Predator” Saga.) |
| Age at death | 35 (Othello) 533 (Mordred II) |
| Parents | Mordred LaFey (father; deceased) Kli’asta Schichta’r (mother; deceased) |
| Siblings | Neskomfelva LaFey (slv sister; deceased) Melehan (elder brother; deceased) |
| Spouse | Siobhan Felicity Elechad (wife; dissolved by first death) |
| Children | Lothiana LaFey (slvskorte daughter; Neskomfed by Mordred II), Gannon Elechad (slv son via Siobhan), Grannus LaFey (son via Siobhan; deceased) |
| Title | Top-class pyrokinetic magician. Co-founder of the Cult of Pyre D’ Soliel |
| Alignment | Good (Othello) Evil (Mordred II) |
| Grandparents | Morganne LaFey (Grandmother) Unknown man (grandfather) |
| Aunts and Uncles | King Arthur Pendragon (great-uncle; unknown), Sir Gawain (paternal half-uncle; deceased) |
| Cousins | Ursa Minettestar Pendragon (Arthur’s slv daughter; deceased) |
| Manner of death | Psionically swapped into father’s body as he was about to kill him (Mordred) in defense of Siobhan. |
“Othello” vs “Mordred II”
In the Jones Sisters mini-series, “Finding a Predator,” the man who held Siobhan physically and mentally prisoner in the Rogue Neverzone, Mordred II, was a tyrannical despot who had orchestrated many evil acts against both Earth, the Zetascape, and the Pixie Nation at large. This man answered to Mordred II, the son of Mordred Sr, but the dark secret he kept was that the two men were one and the same. Five centuries prior to the present, Mordred (a decrepit old man) challenged his son Othello to a duel for whether or not Siobhan (Othello’s wife) would be set free. Othello had no love lost for his father, and was ready to eviscerate the old bastard’s throat, but Mordred uttered a mere syllable that switched their minds before the blade struck. That must be kept in mind in order to navigate through the lore.
Life Before Siobhan
Due to the extremely saturated level of Neskomf energy that surrounds this family and its heritage in ages past, there is little information that can be found about this young man before helping his beloved escape. What is known is that Othello had grown up apart from his father, learning of the man who ravished his mother only when he was a teen. The inherent magics that Othello was capable of were passed down to him through Mordred’s blood, so it was through this that the former was able to track down and gain the trust of the man that inadvertently helped create Neverland Prime. Taking the name LaFey as a blind to the contempt he hid from his father, Othello found his way to the monolithic castle his father built in the Rogue Neverland, then feigned amnesia when Mordred’s servants answered the door.
If it were any other person, the terribly-aged Mordred would have seen such a deception, but the magic in Othello’s blood was enough to shroud himself, at least for a while. Mordred welcomed his wayward child into his home, feigning like he was a frail and harmless old man; but unlike Mordred, Othello was prepared. The two steadily gained the other’s trust and for a time were nearly like a father and son, until September 30th of 1553 in the Red-Moon Neverzone (a perpetually dark Neverland with a blood-red moon, often used for covert illicit affairs), where a dark-hearted pirated named Archibald Bowchick (who, unknown to him, had a secret tie to Mordred from so long ago) put up a small Irish girl (who was the same age as Othello) up for auction after double-crossing her cousin, Ray Hardt (promising to transport her to safety in England following the Belfast Slaughter)
Mordred was, of course, the highest bidder, so it wasn’t long before Siobhan was brought to the Rogue Neverzone and put to work as a handmaid. Othello had waited long enough for the perfect opportunity to both save Siobhan (whom he fell in love with) and destroy the father he hated. Using his strongest cloaking spells, Othello saved the captive beauty by taking her beyond his father’s reach, to the Balkans on Earth.
Pyre D’Soliel, and a Life Together
Othello and Siobhan were able to set up a new life for themselves, complete with new identities. Othello had premonitions of a magical being who was thought to be destined as the savior of Earth, in the literal sense. Siobhan had these same premonitions, believing that faith was the key to strengthen events yet to come. Othello’s connections throughout the region had found others who had similar beliefs; so, in secret, the couple united the many who worshipped Pyre D’Soliel (as she was called), and set up numerous secret compounds in Northern Europe, with the base believed to have been in Bordeaux, France.
As the years went by, Siobhan and Othello had reached maturity, but had not grown older than that. They were secretly wed, and eventually gave birth to a baby boy, who also never aged (yet somehow did not create bodily waste, according to a few trusted nursemaids). What no one knew was that word of this “abomination of religious zealots” that used pyrokinesis was spread by malcontents who were spies for Mordred. He had found them, but used the French Parliament to dismantle what they had built, eventually reprehending both Othello and Siobhan and escorting them back through the Great Myriad to his evil Neverzone.
Settling the Score
Mordred was determined to put things back as they were before the two teens fled. Comforted by the knowledge that Mordred had no idea he had a grandson, Othello challenged Mordred for Siobhan’s freedom.

