He stared at the sketch of a microscopic onion cell. He knew he was supposed to label the vacuole and the nucleus, but the lines on the page blurred into a gray fog. "Still on page twelve?" a voice whispered.
"Good," Lena replied, opening her own notebook. "Because page fifteen is about mushrooms, and those get really weird." gdz k rabochei tetradi po biologii pasechnik klass
Lena pulled a chair closer, her movements efficient and quiet. "You’re overthinking it. Think of the plant like a giant apartment building. The conductive tissue is the plumbing and the elevator. The fiber? That’s the steel frame keeping the whole thing from falling over." He stared at the sketch of a microscopic onion cell
Maksim looked at his own messy handwriting. It wasn't perfect, and it was taking forever, but for the first time, he actually understood why a leaf was green. He understood the hidden machinery of the world growing right outside the library window. "Good," Lena replied, opening her own notebook
Maksim looked at the workbook again. Suddenly, the static diagram felt like a living blueprint. He picked up his pencil and labeled the "elevators" of the plant.
Lena shrugged. "The GDZ is like a map. If you just look at the map, you never actually walk the trail. Then, when the test comes and the map is gone, you’re lost in the woods."
"I don’t get the difference between the fiber and the conductive tissue," Maksim sighed, leaning back until his chair creaked. "Pasechnik’s diagrams look like abstract art to me."