The twins grinned, pleased with the results, "Alright, this shall be quite interesting," They laughed to themselves before moving the four in to a group and stood on either side of them. They held up their staves, the ground beneath the group starting to glow. "Huh," Hotaru put her hands on her hips as she watched them before looking at Larel, "I imagine sitting here for forever and a day is going to still be boring, cause from their level of amusement it's going to be hard," she motioned between the twins. They were focused on what they were doing and didn't respond to Hotaru's comment. Within a few seconds the light died around the group and the twins gave a thumbs up, "They're in." Their bodies were suspended in the air by some force so that they didn't all collapse when their consciousness left. "So how will the find the exit?" Hotaru asked "It's kind obvious." "We just wanted to make it sound like it wouldn't be." "You two are obnoxious," She sighed. Mary looked around as they came out on the other side, gritting her teeth a bit as she realized they were in exactly what the twins had predicted. All around them were dead and decaying trees, their branches like hands waiting to snatch them up. It was cold, the air stale, and the world in a never ending darkness, "Mary!" She called out before Eryn grabbed her arm "We're not alone in here and you know it," he hissed, "Let's try and not draw the attention of whatever else is here while we're trying to find her," he chided before they both looked up hearing crying echoing in the air. "Let it come," Mera said firmly, looking at her brother, "If it's coming after us, we can deal with it. Less to haunt Mary," she swatted his arm off before hurrying down the only visible path, looking around for any signs of her sister, the crying continuing to echo. "Scarlet Amera," Eryn groaned, "That could be a trap, a trick to lure you right in," He said as he hurried after, seeming quite put off by his sister's abrupt attitude, "We've got Alari and Kaori here to help, there's no need to be so stubborn." "Eryn," Mera looked at him, holding up her hands like she was trying not to strangle him, "Mary has been in this wretched place who knows how long. If this place is capable of figuring out what to use to lure us, it probably is just as capable of using our fears against us, and that means she's been facing her nightmares since last night," She said before motioning down the path, "This is the only real way forward and there's no way she would run out in to those trees-" "Not if she had a choice, but as you said she could have been facing her nightmares and we both know she'll run like hell in any direction rather than face that," Eryn said shortly, the siblings patience growing short with each other. "We sure as hell can't split up in this place," Mera said firmly, "If we get lost and none of us find her, then we're all stuck here," She turned and started more firmly down the path, towards the source of the echo, Eryn threw his hands up, before looking at the other two, "Don't tell me the two of you agree with her? I need someone to talk some sense in to her before she goes charging off in her not so unusual fashion," he pointed after her. "You're the one needing some sense knocked in to you," Mera called back, further down the path. He turned and hurried after her again when he realized she was getting to a darker area before he skidded to a stop seeing her, "Mera?" he blinked, not sure if he was seeing her right. She turned around, except it wasn't the Mera that had just been there but a younger version of her, one missing a few of the obvious signs of wear, "Okaaay, so there's why we don't want to get separated," he took hold of Mera's arm, "And that explains why that crying is such a familiar pitch," he said, looking around, hoping the other two didn't get too far behind. "Let go of me," Mera tried to get her arm away from his hand. but he held fast, not wanting to see Mera go too far back in to her past. Her hair at this stage was only half way down her back, which meant the point in time when it had gotten all cut off wasn't too far back and that Mera was much less cordial and much more likely to act rashly.