Chapter 43: Graffiti of History

The head worm seems to have received a thought called 'inspiration', and it has scratched countless marks on the ground of the cave with small pointed stones.

In her thoughts, Lynn found that it seemed that this was called 'drawing' rather than 'drawing'.

Although the images drawn are very simple, Lin can see that the head worm is now very excited, and it keeps drawing all kinds of images on the ground and on the cave walls, including animals, plants, and itself, as well as rocks, and so on.

It's unbelievable that it can draw all of these objects with its flesh-like body.

The head worm had been drawing for a long time, almost filling the entire cave floor, and Lynn noticed that each of the different paintings, it was framed in circles, and one after the other, as if describing several successive events.

When the head worm finished drawing, it barked at Lynn's observation eye, and it now seemed to have a new understanding that Lynn's colony did not have a 'leader' but that each one could represent 'Lynn'.

In fact, it noticed this phenomenon earlier, and there would be no communication between Lynn's troops, and at first the head worm was just confused, but when it saw that Lynn had created Behemoth and planted the forest, it began to confirm it.

It will now try to communicate with any of Lynn's classes, rather than specifically the Leviathan.

At this point, the head worm is communicating with the tentacles of the eyeballs in the cave, asking Lynn to see the drawings it has drawn.

The head worm rolls over to the first picture it draws, and uses excitement to indicate the order in which Lynn looks, but in fact it doesn't need to be pointed to, and Lynn remembers the order in which it draws.

This painting seems to be really funny......

In the first picture. The head worm draws what it looks like. And on its side. Surrounded by many arthropods that Lynn had never seen before, the arthropods were divided into two segments with six arthropods, the front half of which stood up and stood with four arthropods, while the front two limbs were lifted in front of them and bladed.

What does it mean that these arthropods are surrounding the head worms? Is it their leader? Is this its race?

Then. The head worm rolls over to the second picture, where the arthropods are fighting, as if hunting, and cutting small plants, and they pile their food in front of a large creature with a huge belly, and the head worm draws a lot of small circles behind it, and these small circles are split, and the worms are coming out of it.

What is that? Eggs?

I see, Lynn suddenly understood. Just as the head worm is responsible for being the 'brain' of the swarm, this creature with a huge belly is responsible for production.

The way they evolved. It's really like a single cell, and the evolution of cells is like this, slowly starting to divide and cooperate, some species are responsible for some events, and they eventually combine into rich multicellular organisms under constant evolution.

Organisms that have evolved into multicellular organisms have the ability to escape the constraints of single-celled organisms that are not possessed by a large number of single-celled organisms, but what happens if multicellular organisms evolve along this route? Do they work together and end up together like single cells? So what kind of creatures do they turn into when they are combined? It's hard to imagine......

However, in any case, this is a fairly powerful evolutionary route, just like the head worm, it does not need to grow a lot of muscles and organs to cope with various situations like ordinary organisms, because there are other similar creatures that have evolved muscles and strength to hunt and do all kinds of things for it, so it can think full-time, so it will evolve a huge head, which will be much smarter than ordinary creatures.

It can then share its wisdom with its less intelligent kindred, and this 'division of labor' is much more powerful than the average solitary or social creature, and they are not only male and female, but also more detailed and complex classifications, which the unicellular organism seems to understand at the beginning, so it can stand out from the single cell.

However, Lynn still doesn't understand what kind of creature she is, and she has long learned that she is very different from the creatures she usually sees, why?

I don't know how long it will take for this question to be explained......

Lynn's current evolution method is also different from ordinary creatures, mainly to combine stronger objects, and most of the creatures that Lin has seen are basically for the purpose of reproduction.

The head worm then rolls to the third painting, which is also a battle scene, but this time not a hunt, but a war, and the head worm draws the nest where its colony is located, which seems to be a rocky cave, and in the cave, there are fighting arthropods everywhere.

The colony of the Head Worm is on the defensive side, while the attacking creature is Lynn's most recent familiarity...... Aztec worms.

Could it be that they have had a war? So the head worm only understands the Aztec worm?

The Brain Worm rolls to the fourth picture, and according to the picture, the Aztec Worms are almost all killed and fleeing, and the Brain Worm race is also partially dead, but they win.

In the fifth picture, the head worm depicts the backs of the Aztec escapers, and the huge sand dunes and balls in the air indicate that they have fled into the desert.

I see, is that why the Aztecs live in the desert? But where do the colonies of brain worms live? It could be inside the twisted jungle.

In the sixth picture, the head worm draws a huge crack, which directly divides the picture into two sections, and the colony of the head worm is split under the crack, many of them are crushed by rocks or wood, and the head worm itself falls into the center of the crack.

What does that mean? The ground is cracked? Ruined miè colony of head worms? And then the head worm fell into the crack on its own?

In the seventh picture, the head worm depicts itself in a jungle environment, and in front of it, a large lizard appears with many small bugs on its body.

That's the Chibucha bug......

In the eighth picture, the head worm draws the crystalline worm of the Chibucha worm, which is located in the crystalline disc in the center of the wormhole.

And in the ninth, it is to see the appearance of Lynn's troops.

It turns out that there are so many funny things that have happened to the head worm?

And in the tenth and last picture, the head worm draws a huge thing, which is like a giant pillar that covers the whole painting, and it is not visible from the outside, and the head worm also draws a lot of creatures on this giant pillar, and at the top, a large number of leaf-like structures are drawn.

Could this be... Plant? (To be continued.) )

PS: Thank you ~Blue Turtle~for the tip~