
It was unbelievably convenient that the coordinates were actually in range of his navigation unit. Considering the utter size of this planet, he expected it to be further. Maybe the universe was giving him a break. Or maybe his luck was a few portal jumps back, trying to catch up with him. He wasn't going to complain - just take advantage of the time he was afforded. The repairs he needed to complete were simple; getting the pieces needed for those repairs however, was not. The planet he'd been shunted to from the last skirmish was well outside the range of his galaxy's scope, or any other galaxy he knew of for that matter. He wouldn't call it primitive, exactly, but...well, their conflicts still remained on a local scale, and they hadn't even terraformed their closest neighbor yet.
His plan was relatively straightforward. Locate the complex, find a way in, do a quick recon, and get the hell out. Quick meant an hour. This was just supposed to be a preliminary sweep, more of a scan to see if anything was even salvageable before he considered trying to lug anything around. His zero-space access had started acting finicky in the last jump, and he didn't want to risk stowing a vital component only to find it stuck and have no other replacement. But that also meant carrying things on his person, which was inconvenient at best. He was also concerned about just how abandoned the complex would be. High end technology wouldn't just be left without any surveillance; humans were nothing if not incredibly protective of their developments. ...now didn't that sound familiar?
He knew well enough that "abandoned" didn't always mean "free of surveillance," so it was also a camera check. He didn't want any humans spotting him, even after the fact; that would just get messy. It was a blessing that the planet had its own network fraught with image and video depicting its primary species. He was able to tinker up a holographic disguise without needing to interact with the nearby populace. Other research had also discouraged him from attempting any contact. He didn't need another army chasing after him. For sake of caution, he risked using some of the battery charge on his approach just after dark, waiting until he'd squirmed his way through a gap he leveraged in a bay door before letting the human visage drop away to familiar kinetic mesh and amber fur.
The smell hit him first: a train-wreck of rotting sweet with an underlying smell of mildew. His nose wrinkled, and he exhaled sharply to stifle a sneeze. He'd known the place was abandoned when he found the news article about it, but that didn't quite prepare him for the utter state of disrepair he found the building in. Even stepping lightly, debris crunched underboot; the place was musty, and it had just a feeling of decay eating at it in the dark. His ears flicked, listening to how his own bit of noise echoed off the space, giving him an idea of how large it was. The ambient glow of his nav unit gave him more than utter blackness to look into, but it wasn't enough to make anything useful out. He snagged a flare from his boot and lit it, squinting past its initial spark to get a better look at the space. His best guess was that it was some sort of loading bay. He wondered how long it had to have been abandoned for all the trash to have piled up. In any event, he wasn't going to go digging in trash for salvage if he could help it. The complex was massive; there would be better places to look first. He could do blood, rust, and dirt, but he drew a line at anything that could start growing something.
The most accessible exit of the bay was across the room. He fiddled with his nav unit as he crossed, checking the limited charge and debating whether to spend some of it on map tracing. He decided against if for now; he didn't plan on going far, and he was a pretty decent navigator. It would be just like the caves he explored in his youth- and continued to explore whenever he could sneak away from work. The smells changed as he crossed the threshold to the next room, the smell of mold and rotting food assaulting his nose. This room turned out to be less straightforward, bulkier debris filling the room with only a snaking path to get around it. He skirted around a particularly suspicious looking pile, hoping it didn't try to come to life and eat him. Wouldn't be the first time.
About halfway through the room, it occurred to him: the room was a kitchen. He took a step sideways and tilted his head at an appliance that was, probably, an oven. It made sense that a complex of this size would have many; maybe food safety issues got it shut down. It occurred to him that he'd never fixed the stove back home after the fuel incident. He'd ruined a perfectly good pie in collateral damage. His wife had been furious. The memory made him want to laugh as much as it made him want to cry. He did neither, turning away from the mess to make his way to the next doorway. He ignored the pang of hunger that needled for attention, trying not to think about how long it had been since he'd eaten. He didn't think he'd find anything in this mess anyway.
The next room was a jungle of shelves, and he did some hopeful searching as he meandered between the rows. Disappointment was his only reward. There didn't seem to be anything particularly useful, and he worried that he might have to explore the complex a lot further before he would. Maybe other scavengers had come through, he considered, or the company cleared any of its high-end stuff out before leaving the building to its fate. He was just beginning to consider his mapping function again when his boot sent something rolling away from him. He tracked it, meeting a pair of dead optics as it bumped a shelf corner. The flood of curiosity was a welcome feeling as he shuffled closer and inspected it with his flare raised.
"Hello, you," he mused in a murmur. He set the flare down on the ground and picked up the object - what looked to be a poor robot's head. He turned it over in his hands a few times, finding its seams and ports. His tail twisted with interest as he scrutinized the bolts, considering how likely it was that one of his tools would be able to jimmy them out of the sockets. Just as he started reaching for the tool at his belt, his ear twitched. A beat later, he heard something clatter in the previous room, and he turned his head to look over his shoulder. He didn't think anything had been precarious enough to fall when he'd gone through. Vermin, maybe? Or a person - another scavenger? Or maybe he'd been spotted already; he hadn't been looking for cameras like he should have been. He flicked the dial for his hologuise, waiting for its unsteady flickering to settle and hold for a second before he set the robot aside and inched back around to the doorway, peeking back into the kitchen. He half stood when he didn't see anything immediately, scanning what he could see in the faint glow from the flare left behind him.