This answer.
The entire room erupted in amazement.
All the members of the club exchanged glances, unable to believe... this question would actually be refused!
How unexpected.
Where Einstein's ashes were scattered was, in itself, a question of little significance.
The world knows: the renowned physicist Einstein passed away in 1955, his brain stolen by doctors, his body cremated, and the ashes scattered in a place kept secret by his children.
He's already dead, so it hardly matters where the ashes were scattered.
What's more, seventy years have already passed—wherever they were scattered, they've probably long since nourished flowers, grass, and trees.
Yet for such a trivial question...
Why would the president of the Genius Club, the elderly man wearing Einstein's mask, refuse to answer?
"Could it be... that our club itself has some connection with the historical Einstein?"
Galileo was the first to analyze: