There might have been a moment, however brief, where Jess found Light’s offer tempting purely to get a break from having to fight her own weight on every step. The climb out of the crater had not been long, and had not been too steep, but between that and the walk to the ship, she felt like she had just climbed a mountain. As soon as they had finally arrived, she came to a stop and sat herself down in the dirt. “I can handle myself, but I [i]am[/i] taking a break. Why don’t you two look for a way in? I’m sure you can handle it.” Overall, the freighter seemed large from where they were standing. It was almost twice the size of Light’s ship, but for these massive corporations, even that was on the small side for their cargo haulers. It was all of Human make, with by far the largest of its components being its cargo bay. These sorts of ships were known for having the bare minimum in living space and other crew accommodations, in favor of being able to haul more cargo at once and get the best returns per trip. Each hull component of the ship was simple, blocky in shape, and all completely modular. Each room of the ship, whether it be a simple habitation module or vital ship system, was designed to be easily removed, replaced, or added on to as needed. Companies that operated across wide regions of space had need of ships that could handle a wide variety of conditions, but buying a [i]single[/i] model of ship that could handle everything would be expensive, as would buying and maintaining many different models simultaneously. Having completely modular vessels allowed them to essentially assemble their own specialized ships while having a wide stock of standardized, interchangeable parts. It was all very efficient, even if it did make their freighters look like flying bricks. On this arrangement of modules, there looked to be exactly one normal entrance into the ship, which was the cargo ramp. There was also a secondary escape hatch on top of the cockpit module, but both were still locked down tight. Peering in through the cockpit windows was awkward from ground level, but at a cursory glance, it seemed empty and unpowered. The main reactor was certainly offline, and no module they could access from the outside seemed to be receiving any backup power, though if an internal module was being powered, they would not necessarily be able to tell from outside. There were no [i]active[/i] atmosphere leaks in any module, which of course meant that either there were no hull breaches, or the affected modules were already fully depressurized. The cargo bay comprised the largest amount of the hull by area, so it was the most likely to be breached, but a breach was also most likely to be on the underside, which they could not currently reach. Given that the freighter did not have airlocks, for safety, there was also no easy external manual release on either entrance, so either they needed power, or to break their way in. So far, there had been no attempts to contact them, so either their arrival had not been noticed, or there was no one to notice them.