Her instructor’s words echoed: “The real exam isn’t against the CAA. It’s against Evo.”
She opened the first module: The bank showed 1,247 questions. Evo didn’t just ask “What is the transition altitude?” It asked it five ways: with a tailwind, in a holding pattern, at midnight, with a faulty altimeter, and in a hypothetical country with different QNH rules.
But that night, she had a nightmare. She was floating in a dark void. A robotic voice said: "New question. You are a passenger in a hot air balloon. The burner fails. The wind is 270/12. You have no radio. The nearest airfield is a grass strip with runway 09/27. Which of the following four identical answers is the MOST correct?"
Exam day. Eva sat in the cold testing center. She clicked Start. The first question appeared. It was… easy. Shockingly easy. “What is the standard lapse rate?”
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