Lanterns Under Iron Ivy
The bell-tower’s gears ground against the night, echoing over mossy cobblestones. Where once there’d been lantern-lit lectures on lost magicks, now neon pipes pulsed blue between Gothic arches. Students in patched cloaks and bootleg augments huddled beneath glowing sigils, swapping encrypted notes as drones buzzed overhead.
Vesper adjusted her hood, making sure the tiny transmitter clipped inside wasn’t visible. In another world, she might have been a bard or an alchemist, but here at Iron Ivy College, she was a journalism major with a knack for breaking firewalls—and rules. Tonight, she had work to do.

She ducked into the shadow of the old library, where flickering holograms danced around stained glass saints. Her partner-in-crime, Cato, waved from behind a stack of dusty tomes—his eyes ringed with fatigue and excitement.
“Ready?” he whispered.
Vesper grinned. “As ever.”
Cato passed her one half of their new prize: a DJI Mic Mini transmitter—so light it felt like nothing at all in her palm. He snapped its twin to his collar, the receiver already hooked discreetly to his battered deck. “With this?” he said quietly. “We’ll catch every word.”
The plan was simple: record proof that Dean Harkwell’s supposed ‘security spells’ weren’t protecting students—they were tracking dissenters. But getting close enough for clean audio? That was where old-world luck and new-tech moxie came in.
They crept along echoing halls, hugging the walls as robed enforcers passed by. At the faculty lounge—a repurposed chapel now lined with humming servers—they waited for the door to open. When it did, Cato slipped in first, invisible amid a cluster of faculty wizards arguing over spell protocols.
Vesper stayed outside, pressing her transmitter against the wooden door. Even through thick oak and whirring enchantments, snippets of conversation funneled into her earpiece: “…compliance rate is up…adjust mana trackers tomorrow…students won’t suspect…”
She caught her breath. The audio came through clear as moonlight—no static, no echoes—even as she heard footsteps behind her.
She froze. A campus guard—a knight in half-armor and cybernetic limbs—glanced her way.
“You lost?” he asked.
Vesper stammered something about missing her curfew scroll and shuffled off toward the courtyard, heart pounding but transmitter still rolling.
Later that night in their dorm—really an attic above the ancient dining hall—Vesper and Cato played back what they’d captured. Their words came through crisp and undeniable; evidence powerful enough to shake Iron Ivy’s foundations.
But how to share it without getting caught?
“Livestream,” Vesper said suddenly. “They can’t hex every channel.”
She set up her phone by candlelight, balancing it atop an overturned cauldron while Cato held both transmitters in trembling hands.
“Let me do this,” he whispered. “My parents—my whole family—they’re depending on me.”
She nodded and clipped one mic to his shirt. The rest she could manage from behind the scenes: pushing out their message over dozens of decentralized feeds, using the Mic Mini’s built-in noise cancellation to filter out the chaos outside—the shouts of campus guards hunting for contraband tech users.
Cato spoke into the lens: “This is Iron Ivy Unmasked.”
Their story poured out over networks old and new—the sharpness of his voice cutting through digital fog. By morning, every corner of campus buzzed with talk: How did they get such clean audio? Who was brave—or reckless—enough to speak?
Dean Harkwell tried damage control, but it was too late; magic or machine couldn’t erase what everyone had already heard.
When Vesper met Cato under the old bell tower after sunrise, he looked exhausted but lighter somehow—like someone who’d finally set down a heavy bag.
“They’re calling us heroes,” he murmured.
Vesper shrugged, tracing a finger along her battered transmitter. “Maybe just storytellers,” she replied softly. “But sometimes that’s enough.”
In a college teetering between ancient secrets and neon futures, two students proved that even the smallest voice—captured clearly enough—could spark change.
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