"Nonono, um... of course it's going to be fine." The Gryffindor reassured her friend, unwilling to watch him start panicking. If he keeled over from nerves, well, that would be unfortunate, and while she was strong, she wasn't sure she was quite strong enough to carry him. "Maybe this is all an illusion. Maybe these wizards are from another part of the world where illusionism is a bigger deal?" Clementine speculated shakily, trying to swallow down some of the dryness that felt almost like a rock in her throat. Monsters and jump-scares would have been less scary than this. She really thought as much as she led them through the red-tinted darkness, shuddering when she noticed the walls around them ripple a little. Was this meant to throw her off her balance as well?
She wasn't ready to admit that this would change her outlook on things for about three days and that after that, she'd be ready to jump into unknown things again. That was sort of how bravery worked, now, wasn't it? It had a fast rebound rate. That was good, too, because nobody would ever stay brave for long if not for that. She stopped for a second to pull honey-blonde hair into a tight ponytail, which always seemed to help her concentration, and stepped a little more confidently down the narrow way.
A few minutes later, she sensed the end. Not of her life, thank God. "Come on, hurry, we're almost there." She reassured Marin earnestly, starting to book at a faster pace toward the "end" of the tunnel, which she couldn't really see -- but she knew was there. It had to be. Illusions could only do so much, and this was a party trick. Made to be an attraction. They wouldn't put it out where children were if that wasn't the case, would they? As they got closer and her excitement to be out of this hell spiked, something from the metaphorical (but annoyingly concealed) ceiling fell down in front of them. It looked like a Cornish Pixie, but it had nastier teeth, greener skin, and was much larger. After a bloodcurdling scream and battering it around away from her face, she realized its disgenuine nature and found it... quite funny.
"Holy shit. Come on, Marin." She was laughing, the puppet had been so realistic, but managed to duck underneath it and push the wall in front of them, which swung out, given enough pressure, as a door would into the sunlight again. "Well, that was an experience, hey?"