I'll explain the last part first: "More modern-looking" here means beyond today's 2017 level of technology. The interior is surprisingly intact, compared to the outside and... the fact that the craft was clearly torn into segments (with the help of a decent quantity of rust). It's muddy and wet, but the gist of it is easy enough to gather. It's somewhere between this and this here in the coach section, though the stairs were farther toward the front of the plane, beyond the point where this section abruptly ends. It looks like the seats are more comfortable (supposedly, though not after all this time) and definitely more individually interactive, with a larger TV on the back of each seat and a guide in the seat-back pouch explaining a number of touch-screen buttons with a number of functions more 'luxury' than coach today would have (eg. customized drink orders, precise A/C controls, tinting and blacking out of their individual window, seat-to-seat video calls, etc). There are supposedly also increased safety measures in case of an emergency, located under and above each seat. Sure enough, some of the underseat and above-seat emergency panels are popped open, the contents missing.
But alright - front to back, huh? It's a good thing she made the rounds. She'll spot what looks like a pair of handcuffs, caught on the armrest nearest the window and wedged down between the seats. The other end is attached to what appears to be a the handle of some kind of case. Too bad the case seems to have broken off at the hinge sometime in the landing.
A few seats back, she'll find... miraculously, half of the case, wedged hard in the open mouth revealed by one of the emptied underseat safety panels. This too must've broken off at the hinge - the other half is nowhere in sight. But that's okay, because nestled into what was likely once an exceptionally high-quality bed of foam padding is a liquid-filled bottle and a syringe. The bottle has a label, but it's just a quick series of numbers and a green dot sticker about a half-inch in diameter.
no subject
But alright - front to back, huh? It's a good thing she made the rounds. She'll spot what looks like a pair of handcuffs, caught on the armrest nearest the window and wedged down between the seats. The other end is attached to what appears to be a the handle of some kind of case. Too bad the case seems to have broken off at the hinge sometime in the landing.
A few seats back, she'll find... miraculously, half of the case, wedged hard in the open mouth revealed by one of the emptied underseat safety panels. This too must've broken off at the hinge - the other half is nowhere in sight. But that's okay, because nestled into what was likely once an exceptionally high-quality bed of foam padding is a liquid-filled bottle and a syringe. The bottle has a label, but it's just a quick series of numbers and a green dot sticker about a half-inch in diameter.