Chapter 208
The physics teacher’s gaze lingered on Morgan with an increasingly peculiar curiosity. He simply
inquired. “Why can’t Mirabe crack it, Morgan? Are you perhaps harboring a bit of a s?”
Morgan choked on his words, blindsided by the counter–question. After a few seconds of silence, he
managed to stammer out, “You’re the one deep into physics. You know the level of difficulty we’re
talking about here. She’s from the humanities..
Although Mr. Hammond couldn’t make heads or tails of the physics problem, he was well aware that an
Olympiad question was no walk in the park. He had heard Morgan harp on about ‘Mirabe being a
humanities student‘ one time too many, couldn’t hold back any longer, and chimed in. “Morgan, you
seem to have forgotten something. Initially, I wanted to ce her in your Prodigy ss.”
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Text ? by N0ve/lDrama.Org.
His implication was clear. She was meant to be a science student all along. Morgan’s doing led to the
twist of fate, whichnded her in the humanities ss.
Mr. Hammond’s reminder hit Morgan like a ton of bricks, almost making him stagger. He had always
refused to entertain, let alone admit, the fact that he had personally pushed Mirabe out of the Prodigy
ss. Every time Mirabe topped the charts with remarkable grades, he would deliberately turn a
blind eye, stop his ears, and shun any twinge of regret. But as Mr. Hammond brought it up, it struck him
like thunder, shattering his self–deception.
Unaware of this backstory, the physics teacher piped up upon Mr. Hammond’s revtion, “So Mirabe
is originally a science student? No wonder she’s so good at physics. I was wondering. why such a
promising student was in the humanities. I’ve been meaning to suggest we transfer her to the science
ss, Mr. Hammond.”
Noting the physics teacher’s astuteness, Mr. Hammond nced at Morgan again, smirking. “You’ve got
quite the eye for talent.”
Morgan’s face paled even further.
“With all this distraction, I almost forgot what we were talking about. Morgan, you mentioned the
competition materials, correct?” As Mr. Hammond spoke, he made his way to his desk. pulled open a
drawer, and retrieved a book. He tossed it casually onto the desk, “Is this what you were looking for?”
Morgan’s eyes fell upon the book. After a few seconds of silence, he picked it up and began to leaf
through it tentatively.
Leaning against the desk, Mr. Hammond’s gaze was indifferent. “Mirabe gave me that material a few
days ago. She said someone had couriered it to her ce by mistake and passed it on to me since she
had no use for it. I thought I’d make a few copies for the students to review.”
Flipping through a few more pages, Morgan found various types of questions and answers.
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including those from previouspetitions–all documented within. Looking up, he began, “This…”
“Oh, that’s right,” Mr. Hammond interjected, as if recalling something after a brief pause. “Mirabe also
mentioned she found some of the solutions in there a bit too cumbersome and old–fashioned. She was
concerned that some might exploit the materials, so she said her approach would be slightly
different…”
He paused as if pondering for a moment, then added softly. “Since we’re investigating. I’ll stop by the
Education Association at noon, pull up Mirabe’s exam paper, and make a copy for all the teachers to
review andpare.”
At the close of Mr. Hammond’s words, Morgan’splexion turned a ghastly shade. Dropping the
materials on the desk, he seemed to dete as if all the life had been drained from him in
that instant.
The physics teacher nced at Morgan, shook his head with a mixture of pity and
astonishment, then casually picked up the book, thumbing through it before clicking his tongue in
disappointment.