Masha stared at Problem No. 14 on page 42. It was a multi-step monster involving three trains, two stations, and a very confusing amount of coal.
When the teacher, Vera Ivanovna, walked by, she tapped Masha’s notebook. "Good work on the diagram, Masha. Most students just guess, but you’re seeing the logic." Masha stared at Problem No
Masha smiled, closing the online tab. The reshebnik had been her map, but she realized she still had to walk the path herself to get anywhere. When the teacher, Vera Ivanovna, walked by, she
She pulled out her phone and quietly searched for the online solution guide. The screen glowed with the familiar layout of the textbook. There it was: Problem 14. She scrolled down, ready to copy the numbers, but then she paused. The site didn't just give the answer; it showed a diagram of the trains moving toward each other. The reshebnik had been her map, but she
Petya didn’t look up from his notebook. He was scribbling furiously, his glasses sliding down his nose. "I’m not using a reshebnik (solution book), Masha. My mom says the brain is like a muscle—if you don't use it, it turns into jelly."
Suddenly, the coal made sense. The speeds were additive. The distances were shrinking.