Chapter 14 Two Bedrooms and One Living Room

This lesson is shorter than the content of the first lesson, and Lao Wang left directly after speaking, leaving the protagonist confused.

"Damn, what do you mean? Do you want to command a swarm of ants? The protagonist thinks to himself: "Isn't it too troublesome to touch the tentacles one by one and give orders......"

Come to think of it, it sounds like the practice is tomorrow, and there will be a special ant notification, so the protagonist leaves the classroom.

Go back to their room first, do your duty as captain, and bring the team behind you home. The protagonist then turns around and prepares to leave. At this time, the roll suddenly rushed over to block the way, and the protagonist never found that the male ant had six limbs and ran so fast, compared to Lao Wang's slow pace, it was like a rabbit.

Rolling came from the tentacles and asked anxiously, "Why don't you stay here?" ”

The protagonist feels strange and a little warm. Before, it was the protagonist who contacted and asked other ants, but this is the first time that an ant has taken the initiative to communicate, and he cares about him.

However, no matter how much he cares, the protagonist can't accept being in the same room with a group of male ants in this crowded cave. So the protagonist sent over to explain, and I don't know if Roll can understand it, anyway, after the protagonist assures that he is absolutely safe, Roll didn't get in the way anymore and went to the side silently.

The protagonist is finally able to leave, but before leaving, he still does not forget to give orders to the janitor ants, and if there is a notification that the ants who practice commanding the ant colony are coming, they must notify themselves in time.

After doing this, the protagonist decides to go back to the break room. Accompanied by the squire soldier ant Mulan, the protagonist walks all the way, ordering the soldier ants and worker ants he encounters along the way to follow him.

Although the practice has not yet begun, the protagonist, who is interested in these lessons, decides to secretly preview them beforehand. When they arrived at the lounge, there were already more than 20 ants behind the protagonist, and the lounge suddenly seemed extremely crowded.

The protagonist has an idea, there happens to be so much labor, so let's just expand the lounge. The protagonist thinks about it for a while, and thinks that at least one set of two bedrooms and one living room can be dug out, and the hall can be used for gatherings, and the two rooms are used as his own bedroom and the other as the bedrooms of the attendants.

As soon as he said it, the protagonist immediately gave the ants an order to expand, and imagined in his mind the scene where the ants were digging with their beaks, as well as the structure of the two-bedroom apartment, and gave it to the ants one by one through the tentacles.

At this time, the protagonist discovered the difficulty of commanding the ant colony, and it took several minutes from the time the protagonist gave the order to the first ant to the completion of all the more than 20 ants. It's not like human beings at all, who give an order and obey it.

This is also thanks to a bug in the communication between the ants, where the protagonist only needs to conceive a command, which is like a temporarily stored packet that can be transmitted to any ant it touches without delay for a certain period of time. Of course, if it's too old, the details of this command pack will be easily forgotten and useless. If the protagonist has to reimagine the order every time he comes into contact with an ant, then it is estimated that he will not have to do anything else for a long time, just give the order.

At best, there were more than 20 soldier ants and worker ants, and the protagonist ran to them in turn to give orders, and it didn't take a few minutes. Then the protagonist waits for his two-bedroom apartment to be completed.

The ants were busy digging burrows and removing soil particles, and in less than an hour, the living room was taking shape, and the passage connecting the bedroom was being excavated.

After watching it for a while, the protagonist suddenly feels that something is not quite right. The protagonist conceives a two-bedroom living room with a square and angular shape that conforms to human aesthetics. And the ants are digging and digging, and the living room has become a half-cut kiwi shape, only the ground is relatively flat, and the walls and ceiling are curved, not much different from the appearance of other ant burrows.

The protagonist quickly runs to one of the worker ants and re-reads the order he gave in her mind. It's strange that in the order I issued, there is no error in the engineering drawings of the components, that is, a square house. The protagonist reads the commands of several other ants, confirming that there is no mistake in his commands.

"Well, these ants are still wrong in carrying out their orders!" The protagonist is also powerless to change, so he has to force himself to accept the aesthetics and construction ability of the ants.

After a while, the protagonist finally has a two-bedroom apartment that he has never had in his previous life, and if you ignore the eggshell-like ceiling and walls overhead, the protagonist is still very satisfied.

The soldier ants and worker ants who have completed the work return to the protagonist, and the protagonist thinks quietly for a few minutes, and for a moment he really can't think of what else these ants should do, so he is ready to let the idle ants go to the larger bedroom first, which will be the room that the protagonist has prepared for his subordinates, enough to accommodate more than a hundred ants to squeeze in.

But the protagonist is about to give orders through the tentacles one by one, only to find that a few soldier ants have slipped away before they can wait for the order......

", don't run, the ants still have a strike." In the eyes of the protagonist, these ants are all his subordinates, how can he let them slip away at will!

The protagonist quickly chases after them, asking them why they don't listen to the command and slip away. Unexpectedly, one of the ants who was stopped actually responded to her dazed mood, and she said that she had not received a new order and had begun to move on her own......

The protagonist immediately feels that his command style may not be right, and if he commands two dozen or so ants, he will not have time to give orders, so that some ants think that there are no more instructions and start to move on their own. Then in the face of more ants, I definitely can't take care of it.

After all, the protagonist is a human soul parasitic on the body of an ant, and there is no experience to refer to. The protagonist thinks about it, ignores the temporarily recruited ants under his subordinates, calls Mulan, and prepares to find an ant to ask.

The preferred object of inquiry, of course, is Comrade Wang, who teaches the protagonist a lesson!