"How do you know?" Taran asked, letting her sleeve fall back down and the saw fold back into place. "We could be waiting for a way to open the door for a while." She shrugged. "Unless you like waiting in old machinery that could collapse at any minute." She paused, considering. "Although this one is a pretty strong model."
Lynn sighed. "I did say I can try and hack us in, if there's a control panel I can access." he said again, not seeming fazed by Taran's arm. He crossed his arms slightly, hoping he wasn't being too irritable.
"You'd have to find one first," she pointed out. Taran wasn't trying to be mean, but she was being logical. She didn't see a control panel anywhere. "Usually they're inside the big huge metal door that no one can break in to."
“You have one other issue there, Lynn,” Derek added, “Power is out. And even if we could, I doubt the Inquisition would be happy about us powering up a Titan.”
"–Moths to a flame," Kyrie nodded in agreement, staring blankly at the wall as he thought of what they could possibly do. He folded his arms, blinking, "So if jump-starting this thing is more-or-less out, what else can we do? I've got tools, but I don't wanna be messin' around with saws and weapons unless it comes down to that."
Derek began walking again, motioning for the others to follow, “Like I said. Let’s find it first. For all we know this one’s looted by now.
They continued picking through the labyrinth of wires and pipes, checking room after room. Titans were notorious for being incredibly confusing, and each one was designed to be unique, but there was a purpose behind that. Titan crews tended to only work with a single Titan for the duration of their service. They learned those Titans inside and out. Any boarders trying to take one over, or destroy key systems would have no idea where to go once inside.