Late one Tuesday, he found a leather-bound notebook tucked behind a loose brick in the basement. It was hand-written, dated forty years ago, signed by a student who had vanished. The answers for Lab 11 were there, but they were strange. Where the textbook asked for the function of a heart, the notebook spoke of "the rhythm of the universe." Where it asked for the structure of a leaf, it described "the veins of fate." Kirill copied it all.

"You found them," Pavlenko whispered, his voice trembling. "The true answers." "Are they right?" Kirill asked, his heart hammering.

Desperate, Kirill had spent weeks searching the dark corners of the school’s archives and the deepest forums of the web for the otvety —the answers.

The next day, as Pavlenko walked between the desks, he stopped at Kirill’s station. The old teacher, whose eyes usually looked like cold glass, softened. He picked up the lab report.

Kirill looked down at his paper. The ink seemed to be pulsing. He realized then that the "answers" weren't just for a grade. They were a map. And for the first time in his life, Kirill wasn't looking at a biology assignment—he was looking at a mirror.

Kirill sat in the back row, his eyes bloodshot. The eleventh laboratory and practical work for 7th-grade biology lay before him like an ancient riddle. Everyone knew Pavlenko didn’t just grade your knowledge of mollusks or the nervous systems of chordates; he graded your soul. If your sketches weren't precise, if your conclusions lacked "the spark of life," you failed.