"No, I did hear that only people are asking for help, but I don't know if they're really there"

"We were already thinking that a drunk chieftain was saying something appropriate to boost the venue."

But, well, it's a good thing that only people survived like this. It's just that people are weak, sick, and so on.

A few days after the cavemen came to Irku Village... three cavemen are saying such things and waving tools like digging sticks cheerfully.

It uses more iron than a digging stick... It's pointed and wide, like a big spoon, and it's still digging through the ground.

"Hey, hey, if you're just talking, I'll leave it to Mae and the others. Dig it, dig it first, or nothing will start."

Hey, we're serious, so even running horses can catch up with us

Washashasha, if you dig it, trample it and lay it down on the gravel, it's fun to build a road!

While saying that, the cave people were digging back and forth... and before the cave people, there were maers eating grass all over the place.

It seems that the road construction of the Dongmen will be done by first digging back the ground, firmly trampling the dug ground... then laying down the gravel without gaps, placing the stones cut out on the gravel and arranging them...

If you dig back the ground like that, of course the grass there will be wasted... it seems that Maha and the others who thought it was a waste are leading the Dong people... they are eating the grass with the momentum of not missing a small piece of grass... and at the beginning of that is Hubert, who is scratching the map and speaking to the Sachi in the sky.

Hubert and Serchi led Maea along the map, and Maea ate the grass... using the grass as a marker for the open ground, and the Dongmen worked... The flow was so good that the road... the dug ground that was to be a road continued to stretch without bending and without warping.

The road leads straight west of Irku Village to the planned site of the western customs post... The construction of the customs post by the Dongmen has already begun at the planned site of the customs post.

Ten of the thirty-two are stone cutouts in the southern wilderness, ten are constructed at the Sekiguchi, six are roadmakers, and six are working in Narvant's workshop with the Narvants to build the Sekiguchi and make the necessary tools for roadmaking.

Both men and women work in the same way every day...... and Mont and Joe help work at the Sekiguchi.

On the east side, the Lord of the Forest Sekiguchi was decided to be Klaus.

The Lord of the Sekiguchi, which is bounded by the Beastman kingdom in the West, has not yet been determined with anyone.

Joe, Lorca, Ryan, everyone else, and even Mont seems to have an admiration for the responsible position of the master of the Sekiguchi... and by working that way, they are working hard to appeal that they are worthy of the Lord.

On the appeal side, it would be troublesome if it were anyone, but it would be good if everyone was motivated to do so.

... and when I think about it,

"Hey, for now, I've finished processing the cobblestone stones"

Master Diaz, the cobblestone composition is important, so come here and take a good look.

Nalvant-sama told me to teach you a lot of things, so please study hard.

Such a voice echoed from behind the village of Irk.

Three of the six people in charge of road construction are digging back into the ground... and the other three are processing the stone brought from the wilderness into some kind of interesting shape.

I thought the cobbled streets were all made of thin stone slabs, but according to Narvant and the others, they weren't a decent way to make them, and the stone slabs soon broke and shifted, making them useless... I think it's the right thing to do with stones that are processed into shapes close to cubes.

A stone close to the size of a cube that I would struggle to lift without breaking or shifting.

It's close to a cube, but it's not a cube... It's basically a cube that sticks out and dents everywhere... Various details have been made on the surface, so why can't you figure out how to do this?

And when I think about it with my neck heavily tilted, one of the Dong people who saw me lifted the stone that was protruding from the center of one side, and another Dong people lifted the stone that was hanging from the center of one side...... and bumped the two stones against each other.

When I was surprised that the stones cut at the corners and processed into each other in such a way... the two Dongmen came right to my side, and the two stones combined tightly together to make it seem like a single stone.

It seems that all the stones they were working on were made to combine with adjacent stones like that... I was surprised or wondering about it, and another Dong people pointed to the planned area in the west and shouted out.

"You're connected to other countries, aren't you?"

He's from another country, maybe he'll become an enemy in the future, maybe he'll attack us.

Like the Sekigaku we built, it would prevent any enemy from coming, but it might still get in and out of the Sekigaku.

Do you have any idea what the enemies who broke in were thinking when they saw the cobbled streets?

This is a good stone, and I think it's perfect for blowing it up with a stone catapult.

Dozens and hundreds of stones are rolling straight to our base, and we're not going to be enemies.

So, to make it easier for your enemies, try to combine stones and make it hard to dig back.

I tried to combine them together so that the stones next to me would hold each other back... and I couldn't dig them back.

Like a gap in a stone, like an iron tool, even if you try to lift it with the principle of leverage, other adjacent stones won't let you.

That's why I struggle to replace the stone when it breaks... like we know how to make things easier around here, so this is just a tool to bother the enemy. "

"Oh...! I see! That's amazing!"

After receiving the explanation from the Dong people, I responded immediately, and the three Dong people laughed as they shook their beards... and quickly stamped the stone into the ground, which was covered with gravel without gaps.

First, one in the middle, then left and right, and from there, whether it was in a determined order, or whether it was being done appropriately, it was like drawing a line to the right, left, front, or back... so gradually, but steadily, stone was installed, and the road to the west was completed.