As a first-year medical student drowning in mnemonics, the "Poly de Pharmacologie Générale" was less of a textbook and more of a survival manual. He clicked download, watching the progress bar crawl with the weight of a thousand drug interactions. When it finally opened, the black-and-white diagrams of receptors and ligands looked like constellations.

That night, the library grew cold, but the glow of his tablet kept him tethered to reality. He wasn't just reading about pharmacokinetics; he was learning the secret language of how the body fights back. By the time he reached the final page on metabolic pathways, the sun was hitting the glass walls of the faculty lounge. He closed the file, feeling, for the first time, like he finally understood the chemistry of life.

The file flickered onto the screen as a dull PDF icon, but for Leo, it was a digital skeleton key.

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