Chapter 198
Avery quickly found out that when Brandon was studying in Aeloria, his professor was Dr. Rhett Simpson. Dr. Simpson was 58 years old and had been divorced three times. He was an authoritative figure and expert in the artificial intelligence sector, passionate about recruiting geniuses from poor and humble backgrounds. Everyone in the industry praised him as a good judge of talent.
Avery finally figured out why he liked to recruit students with no money, power, or background: such students were easy to exploit, manipulate, and bully. Now, it was time for his karma to bite—and Avery was there to make sure karma did its job.
After returning home, Avery took a good afternoon nap. Then, she got up for dinner, took a shower, and drank some coffee before closing the door and turning off her phone. She sat in front of her computer and started writing a thesis. She wrote through the night and didn’t go to bed until four in the morning.
When she woke up in the afternoon, she ate her fill and took another hot bath. She then sat at her desk and reviewed the thesis she’d written the night before.
"Not too bad." Avery nodded with satisfaction. "It’s been a long time since I’ve written such a high-quality paper."
She sent the thesis to a few friends—experts living overseas—via email. As far as she knew, one was on vacation, one was recuperating, and the other was in seclusion for research. They probably wouldn’t check their private emails anytime soon. On another note, she wasn’t going to tell them she’d sent a paper.
Subsequently, she split the 10,000-word paper into three, each consisting of thousands of words. The focus of each was different, but all three covered closely related topics.
Avery first used her email to send one of the shorter papers to Dr. Simpson. After a good night’s sleep, she passed the second paper to her subordinates in Uroterin and asked them to email it to Dr. Simpson. Another day later, she sent the third paper to her subordinates in Arloria, instructing them to do the same.
That was how Dr. Simpson would receive three papers on the same subject—at different times, from different countries, and from different senders.
