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{{Infobox commlink
|title = The First Run - Episode 3
|image = Comm_Link_SorriLyrax_test2.jpg
|url = https://robertsspaceindustries.com/comm-link/spectrum-dispatch/13847-The-First-Run-Episode-Three
|type = Spectrum Dispatch
|publicationdate = 2014-05-02
|series = The First Run
}}
When the tears came, I couldn’t hold them back, which only made how I felt even worse.

I don’t cry easily and I certainly don’t cry in public. In fact, the only time I ever remember crying in front of other people was at my mother’s funeral, and then I didn’t care what people thought of me.

Most of the travelers that came through the port were on business, so they were loading into the hovertaxis that would take them to their meetings. When I started sobbing, it was as if I’d developed a very contagious plague and suddenly there was a bubble of space around me.

I buried my face in my elbow, snorting back the snot that threatened to leak out onto the sleeve of my favorite sweater.

When the tears finally dried up, I took a deep and trembling breath.

That man, whoever had taken my MobiGlas, had not been an actor. That much I knew.

I’d seen men like that come into the Golden Horde before, and my father was always quick to point them out and quick to send me into the back to take inventory. There was something visceral about them, like they were predators set loose in a pen of sheep.

I’d been willing to delude myself up in the station, thinking that the captain could be an act, part of the trial mission that I was being sent on. But that delusion was shattered now.

It also made me realize that the company might have sent me with the wrong files, or they were the intended files, and had planned on sneaking them through station security. And this man, clearly a criminal of some kind, had known about them.

Which made retrieving them even more important. I pinched my arm, mad at myself for being so cavalier with the MobiGlas. If I couldn’t get it back, I’d surely be released from FTL, maybe even fined for my carelessness, and then I’d have to go back to my father not only a failure, but also in debt.

But how was I going to get the MobiGlas back?

As Captain Hennessy had said, I was a wet-behind-the-ears newbie. I didn’t know who this man was, or where he was going. And now he had a good ten minute head start on an electrocycle, while I was still on foot.

My stomach growled at that moment, reminding me of another problem. I was starving. Weak with hunger, in fact.

My father like to say that I ate like a bird, if that bird was a condor. I like to think I had the metabolism of a humming bird, but it meant I was always eating.

Giving up meant getting something to eat. It’s not like I had a way to find this guy.

I decided I’d find a spiced lamb kabob vendor first, while I considered my options.

When I grabbed the straps on my backpack, my hand hit the camera button and my face flushed with excitement.

I quickly unshouldered the backpack and rummaged through until I found my other MobiGlas, the personal one. I’d forgotten I had it, with (hopefully) a camera running, but who knew, with my luck?

“Please still be recording, please still be recording,” I muttered as I brought up the camera files.

I let the relief whistle out of my lips when I saw that it was still taking video.

Flashing back to ten minutes ago, I replayed the scene. The camera button was lower down, so it was showing him at an upward angle, looking right into his chest and chin. Then the view bounced around with me when he grabbed the MobiGlas and rode off.

I replayed the scene three times until I saw what I needed. The first was the license plate on the electrocycle, including the rental company sticker on the back. Unless he’d planned the whole theft weeks ago, including an incorrect file, I might be able to uncover his identity through the rental company.

Return to Comm-Link:The First Run - Episode 3.