Parker shortened his stride so that Silver could keep up with him easily. As he walked up to the building, he visually scanned who was inside. He noticed Terenia had not yet returned to the bar, so she must still be in the ship. He stopped and leaned against the outside wall just aside the front entrance to the bar.
He saw the space that Myitt's ship was at. He checked to see if the ship was still there by activating his IR vision. Once he saw it still stood, he returned to normal viewing. He decided to post up here. It would be away from the hustle of Andromeda's drama, and give him lots of room to move around in case anyone came for Terenia.
If Terenia re-entered the bar, Parker would automatically enter first and stay by the door on the inside to keep an eye on the patrons' behavior towards her.
((Teach, if you have T enter the bar while I'm away please RP that Parker entered first and stood inside by the doorway, scanning the crowd. I'd appreciate it.))
The Director smiled and simply answered both questions with his one, "Nope."
He withdrew a small golden key from his trench coat pocket. He placed it inside a keyhole that was flush to the door. To anyone else it would’ve seemed like a ding in the paintjob. He turned the key, opened the door and skirted his way in. He left the door slightly ajar so Tamora could follow. The door was open just enough to see a bright light, but no detail from the outside.
Inside the ship, it seemed like a huge metallic cavern. It was almost cylindrical in shape, except the walls bowed inward near the roof; almost like standing in the bottom half of a huge metallic hourglass. The dimensions looked nothing like anything that could possibly fit inside of a Bug Fighter. The walls were an old, rusted gold color in panels; each with four hexagonal holes, almost like portholes, in a grid centered in the panel. Branching out from the ceiling, were strange columns/beams that almost looked like coral. They had the same aged golden color as the walls, but they looked and felt like coral. There were five columns spread out evenly around the room. They obviously supported the roof, but also they branched outward to the walls to hold up a metal walkway that circled the room. The floor was a metal grating, a metal flooring could be seen underneath about four feet down.
Directly in the center of the room was a console built around a fiberglass tube that extended up to the ceiling. It shone a bright, pale, green light. The console’s frame consisted of the same material that made the columns. It had six transparent panels that had the same light exuding from underneath. Strewn about each panel was an assortment of strange objects: levers, buttons, switches, plugs, and ports.
((If my words weren’t enough:
[spoiler=TARDIS interior]
![](http://www.gereth.net/blog_irene/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/tardis2iz.jpg)
![](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_plZxk1Lj2FA/R00PyXCiARI/AAAAAAAAARs/I_KWs14jYXg/s400/Tardis2005.JPG)
[/spoiler]))