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{{#seo:
|description=Star Citizen - Comm-Link Archive - The First Run - Episode 2 - "The worst part about being stuck in a holding cell wasn’t the interrogation, but the waiting until it got to that point.”
}}
{{TNT|Infobox Commlink
|Title = The First Run - Episode 2
|Image = Comm_Link_SorriLyrax_test2.jpg
|Source = https://robertsspaceindustries.com/comm-link/spectrum-dispatch/13826-The-First-Run-Episode-Two
|Type = Spectrum Dispatch
|Publication Date= 2014-04-24
|Series = The First Run
}}
The worst part about being stuck in a holding cell wasn’t the interrogation, but the waiting until it got to that point.

Not that I was a hardened criminal or anything, just a bit of a wild child that ran with the wrong crowd for a brief time a few years ago. Racing hovers through the bazaar, painting the hand railing at the casino with a mild contact hallucinogenic, releasing a pack of spitting llamas into an Advocacy convention, that sort of thing.

My history was probably one of the reasons my father had agreed to let me join the courier service. He said, I just had steam to burn, or maybe a little anger that mom had died.
He was wrong on both accounts. Simple boredom, that’s all it was. That and a realization, born from a day when I was sitting in a holding cell just like this one, for one of our petty pranks, that sitting in jail and working in the family bar were just about the same thing.

At least in the bar, though, I could pass the time studying the patrons.

The holding cell was about as featureless as deep space, with a miserably hard chair as its only furniture. They wanted to soften me up, making me so bored I’d be willing to spill my secrets to them willingly. The fact that this actually worked on some criminals boggled my mind. How could they be so dumb?

But I had nothing to worry about. I’d done nothing wrong. I just wish someone would come in so I could tell them that.

After about three hours, a woman entered the cell. She was older, mocha skin, and severe lines around her eyes and mouth. She’d been beautiful once, but now those looks had been suppressed behind duty and a crisply-kept security uniform. Not even one dark hair of her military cut was out of place.

“Sorri Lyrax?”

I gave a thin lipped nod.

“I’m Captain Hennessy. I’m in charge of this facility. I’m sorry about the wait, but I was down the street, on planet,” she said.

The sleepy annoyance was plain as a whistle on her face. They’d disturbed her from her off-time.

“I’m sorry you were bothered,” I said, truly meaning it. “But can you tell me why I’m being held? No one’s said a thing, and while I still have plenty of time to make my courier delivery, I get a bonus for speed. When you need a message delivered, nothing’s faster than FTL!”

I said the last part, the company motto, in a little sing-song voice, which cracked a tiny smile at the corner of Captain Hennessy’s lips. It disappeared as quickly as it appeared.

“A courier, huh? Nobody told me that,” she said, now scowling. She stood there for a moment, arms crossed, biting her lower lip, thinking.

“Nothing like a bureaucracy to gum up the works,” I offered.

She put her hands on her hips. “That’s my bureaucracy you’re talking about.”

I swallowed and pinched my leg. That was a dumb move.

“Look,” she said, “I want to get back down planet, but something on your MobiGlas triggered our new sensors. And we’re also not fond of people recording our security areas. We found a camera button on your backpack.”

I let out a yip of surprise. “Oh, I’d forgotten about that. It’s my first trip for the company, and my first trip off planet. I thought I’d record it all. You know, cause.”

I lifted one shoulder in a partial shrug. Captain Hennessy grumbled in the back of her throat.

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