Nowhere to Run

(Post Soundtrack: "Atmosphere" by Concrete Castles)
D E N O N
TAUNGSDAY
"Are you sure it's all there? Intact?" The young shadowrunner pressed on her contact, one of the rare types she could actually trust to be reliable. His face was distorted on the screen, filters behind proxies over the CryptNet, yet she still searched for the expression on his face. Her Bothan contact had once said he detested those who considered themselves too noble for their profession: smugglers who considered themselves 'merchants of exotic wares' or drug dealers who considered their duties a public service to keep the ne'er-do-wells doped up. Daiya didn't disagree, though ever since then she kept a close watch on during their conversations for any tells that anyone too noble was involved.
"It's all there, of course, and intact. It should be, Nulse will be counting and recounting before it gets processed. No one gets paid until they're satisfied."
Daiya winced, wondering if that came across on her filtered face as well. She didn't entirely like the thought of stiffing some poor courier, it wasn't their fault they had picked the exact cargo run she had her eyes on. When the young shadowrunner heard that ardanium was being brought into Denon, she couldn't pass up a chance no matter what the unintended consequences.
The ardanium could help thousands of people more than whatever Nulse would do with it.
"Good." The teen bobbed her blond curls, knowing at least a nod would show up on her contact's screen. She counted down her mental list on soundless lips, checking off the last bits of information she needed to get in and get the ardanium before anyone was the wiser. Coming up with nothing, Daiya finally felt willing to indulge her curiosity. "Any luck finding out what Nulse actually uses it for?"
"Not a clue." The Bothan looked genuinely forlorn, surprising Daiya with an expression that actually translated through the filters. It seemed like a significant thing, perhaps a point of pride for his species, one that she could definitely relate with. "It's definitely medical grade, but unless I sent someone in to slice that data out for you, it's anyone's guess what it does for their bottom line."
"Oh well," Daiya shrugged, almost wishing she could somehow absolve him. Even though the teen wasn't his operative, her own curiosity made not having the answer nearly painful. She could have used that as more of a justification for this op, having the ardanium would be even better knowing it was depriving Nulse of what they needed. Daiya let it go as her shoulders fell, she had decided a while ago that this op was dangerous enough without any detours. "Thanks for the info," She flicked the video to the corner of her screen, and pressed a few controls on another part of her datapad. "That's two hundred to your account like we agreed. Always good doing business with you, FurloinedLetter286."
"You too, Powderpunk." He signed off.
She sighed in the quiet of her apartment, steadied by the weight of the conversation. Adding the last details to her personal files, Daiya stared at it, unsettled. It didn't seem like enough was there. She knew the time and place of the courier's delivery, the extra morsels of security meant to pad out any gaps left by relying on secrecy alone. She had even discovered where in Seven Corners the hand-off was meant to take place, in the Volgho Hollows ward which Daiya already knew well. Everything was in perfect order to support the op, except for one thing.
The young shadowrunner was going to need all the support she could get to convince the op's beneficiary to let her pull it off.

In her long trip to the clinic, Daiya agonized over her whole purpose in this to begin with. She was so sure of it in the thick of planning, but the further the teen found herself from the comfort of her apartment and the familiarity of Seven Corners, the more she wondered if she was wasting her time. Last they had spoken —argued— Doc had been eager to point out any errors in her logic, and so quietly disappointed with her conviction. The teen hadn't bothered to visit him again, her occasional sessions when she had helped at the medic's clinic, and learned some basic techniques along with it, had lapsed after their virtual argument. By the time she was almost there, Daiya was fully expecting Doc to turn her away the moment he spied her face.
She would have. It took a lot for Daiya to feel betrayed by someone, but every part of Doc's face in the tatt-chat had a look she had worn enough times to know it by heart. The teen wore the disappointment herself, mixed with anger and the frustration that Darkwire had come to such bitter division. Just thinking about it drummed up all the emotions once again, and the teen had to grasp the clenched fist with her other hand, hiding it from others on the tram and massaging the back of it to quell her own misgivings.
The clinic nestled itself into a secluded part of District 9, just seedy enough that the average being wouldn't stumble upon it. Daiya had visited a few times, especially after her own injuries caused the Doc to demand a series of check-ups until he was satisfied with how her hip was healing. It felt sore now, like it was traveling back to that time with her, back when Doc had been more a friend and mentor to her than an enigma. The teen bit her lip as she stopped outside the clinic doors, goosebumps rising from her sleeveless arms from more nerves than the chill in the air. She had weathered a snowy cold in this district, and yet Daiya couldn't help but shiver at the reception she expected inside.
Daiya opened the door, unsecured as it was during normal clinic hours. She paused in the front waiting room, realizing this was only the second time the teen had come as merely a visitor. There was a new protocol droid waiting to alert the Doc to waiting patients, and it stopped her short of just going in. The teen shook her head at the droid's query, "It's not an emergency, I'm just a—"
Friend?
"—visitor. I can wait." Apprehension guided her to one of the sitting chairs in the lobby, deciding it was better to appreciate the wait rather than priming her nerves even more by having Doc notified.
A minute later she was up anyway, standing at the divider between the two rooms. "Doc?" the teen called, her voice shaky and uncertain. Suddenly she wanted to be nowhere near this place, wishing she had never stepped on the tram to begin with. Her boots pointed toward the exit, if only her sense of guilt would let them move. She stuck them fast to the floor, committed now that she'd called attention to herself. "It's Daiya. I'm just here to—"
Check in?
Apologize?
Prove you wrong?
Daiya shook her head at the withering options in her mind, picking the easiest instead. "—talk. Can I come back?"