The Mantis began suffering damage almost immediately after the temperature descended beyond a critical point.
The cold started penetrating its natural defenses faster than its body could compensate. Not instant damage but progressive deterioration that accumulated with each passing second.
The cold penetrated from all directions simultaneously in a manner that made defending effectively against the practically environmental assault impossible.
Externally, the frigid air attacked its exoskeleton, which could resist physical impacts and ordinary elemental attacks but didn’t have perfect protection against extreme temperatures. Chitin was excellent armor against cutting and crushing forces. Less excellent against thermal stress. The material became brittle at low temperatures, with microscopic fractures forming as the molecular structure lost flexibility.
And worse still, the roots that had been feeding the Mantis with stolen mana from the Amphibian had now converted into channels that transmitted cold directly toward the creature’s internal system.
The freezing plants acted as thermal conductors that drained body heat faster than the Mantis’s metabolism could compensate for, an effect that accumulated with each second that passed. What had been an advantage, direct connection to an energy source, became a liability when that connection turned into a highway for heat loss.
Heat flowed from warm to cold through any available pathway. The frozen plants provided excellent pathways. And the Mantis, being much warmer than its surroundings, was bleeding thermal energy at a rate that was unsustainable.
Being the smallest beast among the three that Ren had available and the least defensive by nature, the damage it accumulated was considerably greater than what the Hydra or Wolverine would have suffered under the same conditions.
Surface-to-volume ratio was higher, meaning rapid heat exchange with the environment.
The compact structure that was normally an advantage in terms of mobility converted into disadvantage. Small bodies lost heat faster than large ones, basic thermodynamics that applied to beasts as much as to physics.
And the resources the Mantis had available to respond were critically low.
It had cycled aggressively during the exchange with the plant invasion, spending and recovering mana in volume exceeding its base capacity multiple times.
But now with almost all the plants dead, the incoming flow of stolen energy had cooled and reduced abruptly, leaving it operating only with what remained in its own reserves. And those reserves were about to be completely exhausted.
It would have between 10 and 15 percent remaining.
With the cold intensifying and mana nearly depleted, it would be extremely difficult to reactivate the plant zone that had been so effective moments earlier.
Min had almost perfectly timed, if by luck, the moment when the Mantis’s energy investment had been at its maximum possible commitment. The digestion boost had come right when the plant network was most extensive.
Then the cold had prevented regeneration. Then the Mantis found itself at critical reserves without the recovery mechanism that had been sustaining it.
Perfect timing... Perfect trap.
Seeds required some warmth, or at least less cold, to germinate appropriately, a process that sub-zero temperature inhibited almost completely.
Germination required metabolic activity. Metabolic activity required enzymes. Enzymes stopped functioning below certain temperatures.
Worse still, the Mantis was in a position where any direct hit from the Amphibian would be literally the last it could receive.
It was a situation Ren recognized as mandatory loss, a moment where continuation would only result in receiving bond damage without realistic possibility of reversing momentum.
But Ren wasn’t a person who surrendered without at least attempting something that could create advantage for subsequent battle phases even if immediate victory was unattainable.
He liked efficiency like that...
So he decided on an approach that seemed strange considering the circumstances but had logic when objectives beyond simple elimination of the current opponent were considered.
The Mantis wasn’t particularly good at launching ranged magic, with its specialization being more in close-range combat where speed and elemental versatility could be exploited in rapid exchanges.
But it wasn’t weak in the broad sense when forced to operate in that mode.
Compared to various common Silver-rank beasts specialized in a single element, its capacity to project elemental attacks was respectable.
Especially when you consider that most Silver 3 beasts had maybe 60-70% efficiency with their primary element when compared to the Bronze 2 beast. The Mantis, even exhausted and operating in adverse conditions, still had residual advantages from the buffs and Ren’s bond structure he’d cultivated.
So the fireballs it launched with the little mana remaining weren’t weak according to common creature standards, especially considering it was exhausted and operating in adverse conditions.

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