Chapter 34
He knew very well what kind of children had been admitted to the Gifted Academy this year.
āI heard the nobles went crazy trying to send their kids in.ā
It was pathetic watching them scramble for a way to get into the emperorās good graces.
āTheyāre probably all flocking together trying to build connections.ā
There was no way children like that would take his class.
āI canāt stand that sort of thing.ā
Even at the Academy, he was infamous for being difficult and unapproachable.
Besides, he wasnāt particularly close to any other nobles either.
Thatās why Malles was confident that not a single student would sign up for his class.
But then he received word thatĀ oneĀ student had signed up ā perhaps a child with vision problems.
āThis is a problem.ā
He had planned to quietly do research at the Gifted Academy for a year, then collect a generous retirement payout and finally retire.
He couldnāt afford to waste time on some presumptuous noble kid.
āSo I gave them a completely unreasonable assignment on purpose.ā
He told them to solve fifty advanced math problems within two days.
Any sane child wouldāve screamed,Ā āThis professor is crazy!āĀ and run for the hills.
They were probably already sitting in someone elseās class by now.
Malles opened the classroom door with a smile, imagining the empty, peaceful room.
āā¦Huh?ā
He let out a dumbfounded noise.
He distinctly remembered the classroom being bleak and lifeless.
Just an ordinary professorās desk and podium. About five student desks and chairs. That was all.
A few books heād brought himself, and nothing else ā a run-down, desolate space.
He hadnāt even asked for it to be cleaned, hoping the dusty atmosphere would drive that one student away.
āSo why is it so clean?ā
The classroom was spotless, not a speck of dust to be seen.
The scattered desks were neatly aligned, and the chalk dust beneath the board had been completely wiped away.
And that wasnāt all.
On his desk sat a vase holding a freshly bloomed flower, and a cool, pleasant spring breeze flowed in through the open window.
āDid the cleaning staff come by?ā
Even if they had, this level of tidiness was surprising.
He may have chosen the shabbiest corner classroom on purpose, but like anyone else, he still preferred cleanliness.
As he surveyed the room with a satisfied expressionā
āHello!ā
āā¦?ā
He looked down, startled by the voice from below.
There stood a small child in the Gifted Academyās uniform, looking up at him.
āAnd who might you be?ā
āIām Evie Elden. Are you Professor Malles?ā
A clear, bright voice. And a strangely emotional look on the childās face as she gazed at him ā he nodded almost reflexively.
āYes, Iām Professor Malles. But donāt tell me⦠youāre the one taking the advanced math course?ā
āYes, Professor!ā
Evie answered energetically with a smile.
Malles was flustered.
He had wondered which idiot had signed up for his course ā but to think it would be such a young child.
He had assumed the first assignment would scare her off and she wouldnāt even show up today.
And yet, instead of running away, sheād come to greet him.
āThis⦠this wasnāt supposed to happen.ā
Malles glanced at the writing he had left on the chalkboard and tried to refocus.
āGet a grip. I need to send this kid away if I want a peaceful year.ā
She was unusually small and frail for a noble child.
And she didnāt have that arrogant air typical of noble brats.
But he couldnāt let himself waver. He was on the verge of retirement ā he wasnāt about to spend it babysitting.
He deliberately spoke in a gruff tone.
āRight. Did you do the assignment?ā
No way she had.
Each problem took at least one to two hours to solve ā they were all extremely difficult.
Even if she was smart enough to get into the Gifted Academy, advanced math wasnāt something a kid could breeze through.
Evieās expression stiffened slightly at his words.
The advanced math book was challenging even for those minoring in the subject.
There was no way such a young child had done it properly.
āAs expected. She probably didnāt do it right. Thatās why sheās trying to butter me up with a smile.ā
He had seen countless students try to sweet-talk their way out of assignments.
To think a child was already trying to weasel her way through.
Just as Malles was preparing to scold herā
āI did try, but some of the problems were too hard, so I couldnāt finish them all.ā
Evie answered in a small voice as she held out her notebook.
Malles took it, already assuming what heād find.
āNo doubt she only attempted the first few questions to make it look like she tried.ā
Heād been a professor a long time.
They always scribbled down a few answers at the beginning and then gave up, whining that it was too difficult.
But the moment he opened the notebook, his eyes widened.
From the very first page, it was filled with dense formulas and calculations.
Round, neat handwriting filled the page from top to bottom. Malles found himself unconsciously following the solution with his eyes.
āā¦Huh.ā
A soft gasp escaped him.
It was a beautifully clean solution. Good enough to go into a textbook.
His eyes flew to the next page. Another flawless solution.
He flipped through several more problems ā all perfectly solved ā before finally landing on one she hadnāt completed.
Instead of feeling pleased to find a flaw, he actually felt a little disappointed.
āWhy couldnāt you solve this one? Itās just like the last problem ā you use the same formulas.ā
āI think from that one onward, I needed to use the Pirna equation together with it⦠but I havenāt learned that yet. I looked at the bookās explanation, but I didnāt really get itā¦ā
Her voice grew smaller and smaller.
Sheād managed to solve the earlier problems with enough time and effort, but from there on, sheād hit a wall.
āā¦Tsk. This wonāt do!ā
Malles thumped his chest in frustration.
Seeing the large professor looking so flustered, Evie shrank back further.
Is he angry? Is he mad that I joined the academy without knowing this stuff?
But then, Malles walked over to the desk and gestured at her.
āYou, sit down here!ā
One hour later.
āNow, child, this part right hereā¦ā
Malles was explaining in a warm, gentle voice.
āSee this starting point? If you draw a straight line from hereā¦ā
He picked up a piece of chalk and drew several graphs and shapes on the board.
Evie watched closely and copied everything into her notebook.
āAnd then it ends like this. Got it?ā
āYes!ā
Evie answered cheerfully, and a bright smile spread across Professor Mallesā face.
If anyone who knew him had seen that, they wouldāve rubbed their eyes, thinking they were hallucinating.
Professor Malles ā the grumpy, unsmiling professor.
At the Academy, he was notorious for making students cry.
Even students who could handle any amount of studying didnāt want to face him.
And now, here he was, explaining kindly ā and even smiling.
āIf anythingās too hard, just tell me. Iāll explain again.ā
āNo, Iām fine! When I looked at it in the book yesterday, it was really hard, but your explanation made it so easy to understand!ā
āDid it? Mustāve been written by an idiotāā
Malles trailed off mid-sentence, suddenly rememberingĀ heĀ was the one who wrote that advanced math book.
āAhem. Well, yes, I may have written it a bit too difficult. I mean, itĀ wasĀ written for adult academy students. If Iād known someone your age would read it, Iād have written it much more simply.ā
He hurriedly made excuses and picked up the chalk again.
Just then, the distant sound of the clock towerās bell echoed. Class was over.
āItās over alreadyā¦ā
Evieās face was tinged with disappointment.
To Malles, that expression was deeply endearing.
āYes, this is how a student should be!ā
Instead of rushing out the moment the bell rang, she felt regret for the learning left undone. That was the mark of a true student.
If anyone else had heard his thoughts, they wouldāve shaken their heads.
Malles glanced at his book.
āWeāve only done one class today, and weāre already almost done with Chapter 1.ā
Truly astonishing speed. Back at the Academy, it used to take him two whole weeks to get through one chapter.
But now, they were nearly done in just a day.
āShe understands things incredibly fast.ā
And despite the lesson going on for over two hours, she hadnāt lost focus once ā her eyes lit up every time he explained something new.
Because of that, Malles found himself getting more and more excited as he taught.
āI canāt remember the last time I taught like this.ā
Heād grown used to students who looked half-asleep, slumped in their chairs.
But now, he had a student who listened intently, asked questions, and made a sincere effort to understand.
His heart swelled.
āThis⦠this is the kind of student Iāve always wanted to teach.ā






