I was looking at my post from yesterday and realized that I didn't add on the collective action of moving to the hanger that I was planning to. So....I'm just gonna put that here because honestly it changes things a fair bit. If your action isn't changed by this, just repost it. Sorry about that, distracted posting and brain haze.
The assorted collection of ne'er do wells and ragamuffins continues their way to the hanger. It's fairly easy going, oddly enough; the concourse is long and basically barren, lacking any sort of sod or even civilian presence. It's almost unsettling how quiet it is.
Steve steers the group through the concourse, down a connecting hall and to a freight elevator that leads down several stories and finally to a hall that brings them to the entire other side of the building. The view from the windows here is something else entirely. Spread across the barren rocky plain is a massive stellar parking lot of sorts; rows upon rows of smaller cages similar to the one the sword is resting in. These cages, only about 20% of which are occupied, seem to sit atop a great mechanical pit, a spiderweb of metal over a yawning chasm of mechanical limbs, railings, half constructed ships, conveyors and flatbed loaders riding around on paths that spiral around the hole like the dirt roads of a great pit mine. As they watch, one of the cages with a ship in it descends into the pit on an automated lift system and is shuffled off into a haze of mechanical limbs which immediately start to work on it. In the far distance, a series of towers, like the aircraft control towers of terrestrial planes, dots the outer perimeter of the holding area, reaching heights greater then even the massive main building complex.
>Alright, the ship you're looking for should be in cage D-663. They may have covered up or renamed the cage itself, to prevent confusion about an "extra" cage, but the ones around it should give it away. There's signs down on the walkways between the cages, which should lead you there. Be careful though, that is one very large, very open area.