Once upon a time in a dusty classroom in Omsk, there was a boy named Artem who faced his greatest enemy: the by Biboletova .
Artem smiled. He still kept the GDZ bookmarked, just in case, but he realized that the "Rider" wasn't so scary after all—it was just a story about a boy, an elephant, and a very confused internet translation.
He realized that if he copied the mistake, his teacher, Elena Pavlovna, would know he used a cheat sheet. She was famous for spotting "GDZ ghosts."
The book sat on his desk, its colorful cover mocking him. The assignment was a two-page story about a boy named Billy and his trip to the London Zoo. Artem stared at the words. “I like to watch the monkeys,” he read. But the questions at the end were a nightmare.
But as he reached the last question, something strange happened. The GDZ site had a typo. It said: “Billy visited the Moon with the monkeys.”
“Why did Billy give an apple to the elephant?” the book asked.
Artem paused. He looked at the book. The book said “London Zoo.” He looked at the GDZ. The GDZ said “The Moon.”