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"Forgot?" The supervising professor looked suspicious.

"Suddenly forgot," Luo Wei put away her wand. "Professor, may I go?"

The supervising professor's face was expressionless. "Then go ahead."

Headmaster Morrison was absolutely right—this student was a troublemaker!

He'd been a professor at Siria Magic Academy for over a decade and had never seen a student dare be this arrogant on the exam platform.

If she didn't want to learn spellchanting, just say so. What was this about forgetting the spells? Did she think he was blind and couldn't see the dust clouds she'd thrown up a minute ago?

Hmph!

So many people wanted to learn spellchanting but couldn't. Did she know what she was missing?

The annoyed spellchanting professor made a note about Luo Wei in his little book, thinking that after the assessnt he'd definitely have a good chat with Professor Moses.

Look at the student she'd taught—completely lawless!

If she could hear the professor's ntal grumbling, Luo Wei would at least defend herself a bit. She really didn't do it on purpose!

She'd always wanted to choose spellchanting as her profession. Who could have predicted this kind of mishap during the exam?

If you asked her, the academy's assessnt design was fundantally flawed.

No key points outlined before the exam, question scope too broad, success depending entirely on luck—completely unfriendly to unlucky people.

Fortunately, there weren't many earth magic spells—only four. If there'd been seven, eight, or ten, she definitely would have failed this exam.

Luo Wei couldn't even say whether her luck was good or bad.

Leaving the platform, she saw Axina, who'd finished the spellchanting exam half an hour ago.

The other girl still stood below, clearly waiting to see Luo Wei's exam score.

Since the victory ball that night, Axina hadn't spoken to Luo Wei again.

Though they were in the sa class, they treated each other as air.

Today, for so reason, Axina had fixated on her again.

Luo Wei looked back. Their eyes t. Sparks flew in Axina's azure eyes.

Luo Wei felt baffled. She hadn't provoked her, had she?

Axina was furious. She'd gotten a perfect score on the spellchanting assessnt, yet everyone thought Luo Wei's magical talent was stronger, as if her perfect score was fake.

Luo Wei was just grandstanding!

Because her earth elent affinity was low and she knew she couldn't get a perfect score, she deliberately didn't recite earth spells to keep herself undefeated!

So calculating! Damn it, she was still playing innocent and aloof there. Hateful!

Resentnt swirled around Axina.

She'd originally wanted to use the end-of-year assessnt to show everyone who the real magic genius was.

Luo Wei's stunt instead made her—who'd drained her magic to get a perfect score—into a joke!

Axina stared at Luo Wei's departing back, her unwilling heart gradually swelling with anger.

Third day of the end-of-year assessnt.

Luo Wei smoothly passed both the morning swordsmanship assessnt and afternoon horsemanship assessnt. Her scores weren't the highest but ranked in the top ten.

So far, except for alchemy, all six other junior departnt assessnt results had been posted.

First place in potions was Hol. First in magic runes was a male classmate nad Colin from Professor Mike's class.

First in spellchanting was Axina. First in swordsmanship was Gladys. First in horsemanship was their old friend Jack.

First place in astrology was undoubtedly Luo Wei.

Even with only nine points, this score crushed all classmates by a wide margin. After all, divination difficulty was truly high—half the students couldn't even enter their ntal worlds.

However, her score had a "tentative" notation. Three months later, when the prediction ca true, her score would be revised.

Whether it changed or not didn't matter to her. Add one point, subtract two—she'd still be first.

Final day: Alchemy assessnt.

The exam content matched what Professor Temple had said in class—forge a sharp sword.

But the assessnt standards weren't as strict as Professor Temple claid. To make students attend class seriously, he'd deliberately made the assessnt sound difficult, saying it had to be sharp enough to cut a hair blown against it to pass.

Actually, no. The forged iron sword only needed to pass three tests—hardness, flexibility, and sharpness—to pass.

Like other students, Luo Wei first slted iron ore at high temperatures to extract iron, then repeatedly hamred to remove impurities, obtaining wrought iron.

She placed the hamred iron block in charcoal to heat, carburized and quenched it, then tempered it at low temperature to improve toughness and strength, producing carburized steel.

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Carburized steel was hard yet tough, not easily bent or broken. Continuing to grind, shape, and sharpen it—the finished product was nearly complete.

After forging for over seven hours, Luo Wei finally completed the sword and submitted it.

The supervising professor first chopped at another iron sword with hers several tis, then stabbed a wooden dummy a few tis. Finally, he sliced across a thick stack of parchnt. Seeing the sword could still easily cut through parchnt, he announced she'd passed.

"This sword is good. Ten points!"

After recording the score on papyrus, the supervising professor looked up, saw her thin arms and legs, and showed surprised eyes.

With such a small fra, quite strong!

After hamring iron all day, feeling completely drained, Luo Wei was too tired to even speak.

After leaving the alchemy room, she dragged her lead-heavy legs back to the dorm and collapsed weakly on the bed.

Few people could walk back on their own like her. More common were students who fainted halfway through and were carried away, or crawled back on hands and feet.

Pure manual ironwork—truly not work for humans.

Lying there, Luo Wei tiredly closed her eyes.

She'd only ant to nap briefly but unexpectedly slept until noon the next day, woken by the room's furnace-like heat.

When she woke, Nicole was perched on her right temple, using her claws to pry open her eyelids—probably checking if she was dead.

Opening her eyes to see a black shadow at the corner of her vision, feeling an itch at her brow bone, Luo Wei said helplessly: "Nicole, to check if soone's dead, you should check their breathing. Lifting eyelids like this will scare people!"

The Infernal Arachne whooshed to her chest, turned around, and stared at her with big dark eyes.

Luo Wei cupped it in one hand and sat up, propping herself on the bed.

"When did you co out?"

Nicole raised two antennae and waved them around, like two windshield wipers swaying on a car's front window.

"You ca out as soon as the morning bell rang? Couldn't wake and were worried?"

Luo Wei read its aning from its body language and gently set it on the bedside, explaining: "I'm not sick, just a bit tired yesterday. I'm fine now."

Nicole tilted its head and waved its claws twice more.

"Gladys and Hessel ca this morning?"

"Got it. I'll go find them in a bit."

Luo Wei got up and out of bed, rang the bell for soone to bring up a basin of water, washed up simply, changed clothes, and went out.

Neither Gladys nor Hessel were in their rooms. After ten-so minutes, she found them in the academy cafeteria.

Both were eating. Steak plates were already stacked thick on the table.

As Luo Wei approached, she heard students on both sides quietly discussing whether eating so much would burst their stomachs.

Gladys and Hessel were deaf to outside voices. Only when Luo Wei walked beside them and they slled the familiar scent did they look up.

"Luo Wei, you're awake. Want so?" Gladys opened her ice-blue eyes and pushed the steak toward her.

Luo Wei shook her head. "You eat. I'm not hungry yet."

Hessel looked at her. "I ca to find you three tis this morning. You never woke up."

Luo Wei sat down beside them. "Yesterday's alchemy was too tiring. I slept like the dead. Did you need sothing, senior?"

"Tonight is the advanced departnt's farewell party. We wanted to ask if you're attending." Hessel said.

Luo Wei froze. She'd forgotten—Sebastian was an advanced student graduating this year.

"Tonight's farewell party... the advanced departnt finished assessnts already?" she asked.

Hessel said: "The advanced departnt only tests one subject. Sebastian passed the spellchanting assessnt this morning. At two this afternoon when Magic Association people co, they'll award him the Interdiate Mage dal."

Luo Wei slowly exhaled. "I see. I'll attend tonight's farewell party. What about you two?"

Gladys nodded. " too."

Hessel: "Laura ca to find last night. We agreed then—we're attending."

ntioning Laura, Luo Wei looked around. "Where are Laura and the others? Didn't they co eat?"

"They already finished and left. Laura needs to request leave from work. Theodore and Hol are at the boys' dorm helping Sebastian move things." Hessel answered.

They'd be out for practical training three months. Laura and Theodore couldn't work for the next three months, so they needed leave.

Hol's tutoring sessions had stopped before Rosie went to Golu City. He didn't need to request leave.

Luo Wei only questioned the latter sentence: "What are they moving? Is it heavy? Needs three people?"

Hessel shook her head. "Not sure. Sebastian said it's treasures he's saved for half a year."

The guinea pig senior was so poor he stole water—what treasures could he have saved?

Luo Wei was curious. Had he also raised chickens in his dorm?

Boys' dormitory castle, advanced departnt area.

Taking advantage of few people in the corridor, Sebastian quickly opened the door and pulled Theodore and Hol inside.

Once the door closed, the interior was dark as night.

Theodore couldn't help crying out: "Old guinea pig, what exactly are you hiding? Acting like a thief!"

Sebastian laughed mysteriously, pulled open thick curtains to let in a beam of light. The dim bedroom revealed its true face—mountains of garbage that shocked the heart.

Tattered clothes, discarded furniture, wooden signs and charcoal, inkwells and quills, shattered stained glass, rusted iron swords and hamrs, stacks of used parchnt scrolls and papyrus...

The room was packed with this chaotic ss. Except for two square ters of activity space at the door and a small bed squeezed into the corner, the forty-plus square ter room had almost no place to step.

Theodore and Hol's eyes widened. They stared at the garbage-mountain scene before them, unable to recover for a long while.

But Sebastian lovingly touched this and that, sighing: "Collecting stuff is still fastest during end-of-year assessnts!"

Theodore bared his teeth. "Collecting what fast? Collecting junk fast?"

"This isn't junk," Sebastian disagreed. "This is all money. Selling it could get at least ten gold coins."

Theodore looked at him like an idiot. "Who'd buy this junk?"

"Octopus junior, no wonder you're too poor to afford pants," Sebastian shook his head and picked up a garnt. "See? Deerskin shirt. Those noble students threw it out. Just a few holes. Wash it, nd it—five silver coins, no problem."

Dropping the clothes, he picked up a chair with a broken leg. "Fine walnut wood. Attach a piece of wood—two silver coins."

"Colored glass shards—grind them round, drill holes, make necklaces and jewelry—fifty copper coins."

"Rusted iron sword—make so sickles, put them in the market next month, custors will fight for them."

"Parchnt—make rain hats. Quills—decorate wind chis. Wood signs—patch doors and windows..."

"Wait, what's written on this sign?" Theodore felt his eyes playing tricks. He seed to see sothing strange on the wooden sign.

"This sign? Let see." Sebastian flipped over the sign in his hand and read the letters: "Green Turtle... Divination Zone?"

"Green Turtle Divination Zone!"

Theodore burst into wild laughter. "Hahaha, Green Turtle Divination Zone! I'm dying! Our academy has divining green turtles? How did I not know? Hahaha—"

Sebastian also laughed. He looked back at the large pile of wooden signs behind him and recalled: "This seems to be a sign I collected from the junior departnt chapel. Probably soone's prank."

Hol looked at both seniors, then at the sign in Sebastian's hand, and asked quietly: "Don't you think seeing this sign makes you think of soone?"

"No, I didn't think of any—" Theodore stopped mid-sentence, eyes widening, tone rising. "...Luo Wei? No way, you an Luo Wei!"

Hol nodded. "She uses a green turtle shell for divination. You forgot?"

"Plus yesterday's astrology assessnt was divided into three zones. The exam room I entered was called Tarot Card Divination Zone. If naming by divination tools, this sign should be from Miss Luo Wei's exam room."

Theodore said in shock: "This na is too careless! At first glance I thought a bunch of green turtles were divining at our academy!"

"Could it be a sign that was written wrong and scrapped?" Sebastian said.

The supervising professor shouldn't be so careless. He saw a smudged ink mark on the sign—probably a scrap marking.

"Even if written wrong, it's hilarious!" Theodore reached out to him. "Give it, give it! I want to show Luo Wei!"

Hol extended his hand back. "Better give it to . I have a spatial ring. Put it inside and no one will see it. Tonight I'll give it to Miss Luo Wei to handle herself."

Sebastian looked at both extended hands, raised an eyebrow, and handed the sign to Hol.

"Alright, quickly help move stuff. At two this afternoon I still need to attend the dal ceremony. Not much ti."

Commoners who beca mages would be granted titles by the Magic Association, becoming lifeti nobles.

Lifeti nobles sounded prestigious but weren't much better than commoners. Their titles could neither be inherited by children nor bring them any benefits.

You are reading Mist Empire’s Rise: Fake Noble to Fog Queen Chapter 364 Mist Empire’s Rise- 363: End-of-Year Assessment on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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