Chapter 979
She glanced at Rosie, who looked confident, and her mother in the audience, who was also grinning
The host said, âRight, you and Rosie both scored full marks. You probably missed my announcement
Ellinor yawned, nonchalantly saying, âI don't buy it
The reporters in the audience looked at her skeptically.
âShe said she doesn't believe it? Is she doubting her own score or Rosie's?"
"Definitely Rosie's score! She must think Rosie, having been out of school for years, would've forgott
âI think so too! Isn't Ellinor being too cocky?â
The audience was buzzing with chatter.
The host emphasized to Ellinor, âEllinor, this is the deal. After your answer sheets reached me, they w
site by the examiner. After
the results were announced, your answer sheets were shown to the reporters and the audience in the
And just now. Rosie claimed that since she handed in her paper first, she should have a slight edge ir
Ellinor, having heard this, yawned again, âEven if we both got full marks, it doesn't mean she's better
A reporter in the audience raised his voice, âEven if handing in early doesn't give bonus points, we al
Ellinor turned to the reporter, âWhy's that?â
The reporter said, âBecause you've been receiving the best education possible at Creston University
the other hand, hasn't been to school for years and has been farming at home, yet she managed
to ace the test. Isn't that telling enough?â
Ellinor chuckled, âMy dear reporter friend, your conclusion is clearly based on the assumption that I c
The reporter was tongueâ
tied by her rigorous logic but still stood by Rosie, âThen do you have any evidence to prove that you
Ellinor nonchalantly shook her head, âNope.â
The reporter smirked. âSince you don't, doesnât that mean you're indeed suspicious?â
Ellinor sat on the stage, looking down at the reporter with clear bias from a higher position, calmly s:
only prove the existence, not the nonexistence. Don't you understand this basic logic? Which media
The reporter's face turned ugly after her response, âYou...â
Most of the other reporters also sided with Rosie. They originally had a soft spot for the underdog, a
A reporter stood up for his colleague, âSo according to your logic, you can't prove that you didn't reI
Ellinor laughed it off lightly, âI never thought that an old classmate with mediocre high school grade:
score full marks at this point.
Hmm... This is a bit of a pickle! To prove something I didn't do, why don't we have another test? Whe