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Now reading: Chapter 788: Ants and Dungeon (1) from The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort, a Action novel by Arkalphaze.

Rodion’s voice slid into Mikhailis’s mind like a needle through cloth—sharp, precise, leaving no space for him to pretend he hadn’t heard it.

He froze.

The noise inside the high tent wasn’t loud to begin with—only the soft murmur of voices, the faint clink of ceramic cups, the whisper of paper as soone shifted a map—but now it all felt distant, as if soone had dropped a glass do over his thoughts.

He sat on a low cushion near the central table, legs folded, posture a touch more relaxed than a court etiquette book would recomnd. Bandages peeked from under the open front of his shirt where his coat hung loose. Every deeper breath sent a spike of pain through his ribs, a sharp, stubborn ache that reminded him how hard the dungeon had thrown him.

Elowen sat to his right, close enough that when she moved, her sleeve brushed his arm in a soft stroke of fabric. Her silver hair was loosely tied back, a few strands falling over her cheek. Serelith lounged across from him, one leg crossed over the other, chin propped on her hand, athyst eyes too bright to be called calm. Vyrelda stood slightly behind Serelith, near the map stand, arms folded, weight balanced on the balls of her feet like she was ready to move at any second. Cerys stayed a step behind them, straight-backed near the tent support, half in shadow, half in light—knight, guard, watchful wall.

Lira knelt by the tea tray, hands folded neatly on her lap, every line of her posture careful and elegant. Her long black ponytail fell down her back like a ribbon of ink. She had been silently pouring tea, refilling cups, collecting empty ones, as if the rhythm of the task could hold the tent together.

All of them felt it when sothing shifted in him.

Elowen’s fingers, resting lightly against the edge of the table, stilled. The faint circling motion she had been making with the tip of one finger over the wood stopped.

Vyrelda’s gaze flicked from the map to him, eyes sharpening in an instant, like a blade turned to face a new threat.

Serelith’s mouth curled a little higher at one corner, smirk tilting as she sensed that delicious crackle in the air that usually ant trouble, or opportunity, or both.

Cerys’s eyes narrowed, subtle, but Mikhailis could feel her attention lock onto him like she was checking again for wounds she might have missed.

Lira’s eyelashes trembled once before she lifted her eyes just enough to look at him from beneath them, reading his face like she had learned to read teacups and knives—quiet, unnoticed, precise.

"Mikhailis?" Elowen’s voice was soft, but it cut through his hesitation cleanly.

He blinked once, twice.

The tent snapped back into focus—the weight of his coat on his shoulders, the warmth of the lamps, the faint sll of herbs from so salve soone had left open near the dical kit.

All... aning? he thought.

He didn’t move his lips. He didn’t need to. The link between him and Rodion had grown so practiced that thought alone was enough, shaped with the sa care he used for delicate rune lines.

Rodion’s answer ca with barely contained pride, each word crisp and too pleased with itself.

A breath escaped him—too small to call a sigh, but more than nothing.

His fingers curled slightly on his knee, as if trying to hold onto sothing.

Elowen saw that. She always did.

Her eyes, sharp and golden, flicked to his hand, then back to his face.

"They succeeded...?" she whispered, voice barely there. It was the kind of whisper that carried more weight than a shout.

Only the people closest to her—him, Serelith, Vyrelda—heard it clearly.

He glanced at her, just for a heartbeat.

Relief rose in his chest, so quick it almost hurt. For a second he thought he might actually smile, and that felt dangerous, too open, with so many eyes here. He pushed it down, turning that feeling into a simple nod, then looked back at the table, pretending to study the cracks in the wood instead.

Good, he thought. At least one thing went right today.

Rodion, of course, had no intention of stopping with just the headline.

he went on, tone shifting into his favourite mode: lecture.

A string of sensations unfurled at the back of Mikhailis’s mind, faint yet vivid: the feel of stone that wasn’t quite stone, cool and damp like muscle; the slight give under pressure where a normal cliff would have stayed rigid; the taste of thick mana in the air, heavy on a sense that wasn’t taste but felt like it anyway.

He saw, through the hive-link, the mory of heavy plates moving in darkness.

Scurabons pressing their broad, scarab-like bodies against the dungeon’s outer layer, feeling for weakness.

Finding it.

Pushing.

Rodion continued,

Of course it is, Mikhailis thought. Everybody stares at the front gate. Nobody checks their own bones.

Across from him, Serelith’s eyes narrowed, catching sothing in his face—maybe the distant look, maybe the way his shoulders relaxed and tensed again.

"Mikha," she drawled, stretching his nickna out in a way that made it both lazy and knife-sharp, "if you’re going to have an epiphany, at least share with the rest of the class."

Her foot tapped lightly against the carpet, impatient and amused.

He inhaled slowly, ribs protesting, then let the breath out through his nose.

"The, ah... experint underground," he said, his voice rougher than usual, still scratched from the yelling and coughing he’d done while being thrown around by dungeon shockwaves. "It worked."

The tent reacted in small ways.

Vyrelda straightened from her relaxed lean over the map stand, weight shifting more evenly. Her arms stayed crossed, but her stance changed from watching to ready.

"The scouts have entered?" she asked, cutting straight to the important part as always.

"More than that," he replied. "They’re... settled. Inside."

Elowen’s shoulders eased a fraction without really moving. It was like watching a bowstring lose just a little tension—not enough to make it slack, but enough to keep it from snapping.

Lira’s fingers tightened for a heartbeat on the edge of the tray, then relaxed again, small motions hidden under proper posture.

Cerys didn’t move much at all, but her eyes flickered, sothing like reluctant respect glinting there. She knew what it ant to send a unit in and have it report: we are in position.

Rodion showed no interest in slowing down. If anything, the sense of a captive audience only made him more enthusiastic.

he said, and Mikhailis could practically hear him pushing imaginary glasses up an imaginary nose.

Here we go, Mikhailis thought, a tired smile tugging at the edge of his mouth. Professor Rodion has entered the stage.

"Rodion, you’re doing the lecture thing again," he added silently.

Rodion ignored him with the focus of soone who believed their explanation was the most important sound in the world.

Rodion went on,

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