Hrothgar jumped not as the man intoned, but as the door closed behind them. He had to resist the urge to clasp his hand on Kei's shoulder, instead choosing to grip the hem of his shirt tightly. Though he had long since grown out of his childhood fear of the dark, he was still unnerved.
He was all fine and accepting of night and darkness in general-- that's how the universe worked. Day and night were just two halves of the span of time. But when a building, in a city that was arguably well-lit even in the night, was deliberately deprived of light, it just seemed... off. An unnatural sort of darkness. Unsettling did not begin to describe the tall man's intonation.
But he and Kei were in the thick of it now. Though the man's warning seemed to be the last chance they had to turn back, Hrothgar had a faint feeling in the back of his mind that even if they did turn back, it would not be pleasant. As if they would be marked and watched simply due to suspecting something bad was going on in this building.
"O-of course not," he finally answered, steeling his nerves, staring forward at the only available light. The corridor seemed much longer than it had been before the door closed. It would not be the first time he worked as a scribe for something he did not agree with, but he had never had such an ominous warning, either.