Rudkin’s Death and Cybermat Discovery
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Duggan and Corwyn enter the Power Room and discover Rudkin's body amongst the wreckage, prompting Duggan to confirm his death, to which Corwyn affirms before noticing a plastic-covered lump.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Stunned and unnerved, Duggan’s emotional state is a mix of disbelief and creeping dread. The sight of Rudkin’s corpse and the destruction around him shatter his usual compliance, leaving him visibly shaken and questioning the stability of the station he’s sworn to maintain.
Duggan enters the Power Room alongside Corwyn, his face pale as he takes in the devastation—shattered plants, splintered shelving, and Rudkin’s motionless body. His voice is unsteady as he asks if Rudkin is dead, his hands trembling slightly as he processes the violent scene. Duggan’s shock is palpable, rooted in the sudden, brutal confirmation of sabotage and the realization that the station’s safety is no longer assured. His hesitation and wide-eyed gaze suggest a man grappling with the weight of what this means for the Wheel’s future.
- • To confirm Rudkin’s status and understand the cause of the destruction (seeking clarity amid chaos).
- • To support Corwyn in assessing the threat, even if his shock temporarily paralyzes his usual technical focus.
- • The sabotage is deliberate and targeted, not an accident (reinforced by the wreckage and Rudkin’s death).
- • The station’s defenses are compromised, and the threat is immediate (fear of further attacks drives his urgency).
Urgent and resolute, Corwyn’s emotional state is a controlled intensity. She masks her personal shock behind professionalism, but the discovery of the Cybermat and Rudkin’s death fuels a quiet determination. Her focus is razor-sharp, driven by the need to act before the threat spreads further.
Corwyn steps into the Power Room with clinical precision, her trained eyes immediately assessing the scene. She confirms Rudkin’s death with a grim efficiency, her focus shifting to the plastic-covered lump on the floor—a Cybermat, a discovery that escalates the threat from personal tragedy to systemic danger. Corwyn’s urgency is evident as she decides to report Rudkin’s death to the Controller, her voice steady but laced with the weight of the situation. She embodies the station’s logical backbone, but the tension in her posture reveals the stakes: this is no longer about individual lives but the survival of the Wheel itself.
- • To confirm the nature of Rudkin’s death and the extent of the sabotage (seeking actionable intelligence).
- • To alert the Controller and mobilize a response before the Cybermen’s plan succeeds (prioritizing the station’s survival).
- • The Cybermen are behind the sabotage, and their attack is coordinated (inferred from the Cybermat’s presence).
- • Time is critical—delaying a response could mean the loss of the station (driven by the urgency of the moment).
N/A (Rudkin is deceased, but his presence in the scene evokes shock and sorrow in the living characters, reinforcing the stakes of the Cybermen’s attack.).
Rudkin lies motionless among the wreckage of the Power Room, his body a silent testament to the violence that unfolded. The shattered plants and splintered shelving around him suggest a struggle—his death was not accidental but a deliberate act of sabotage. His presence in the scene is a grim reminder of the Cybermen’s infiltration and the station’s vulnerability. Though he does not speak or act, his corpse serves as a catalyst, forcing Duggan and Corwyn to confront the reality of the threat.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Cybermat, concealed beneath a plastic covering, is the critical clue that transforms the scene from a personal tragedy into a systemic threat. Corwyn’s sharp eyes immediately identify it as a Cyberman device, linking Rudkin’s death to the broader sabotage plot. Its presence confirms that the Cybermen’s infiltration is not just theoretical but actively underway, devouring the station’s Bernalium supply and disabling its defenses. The Cybermat’s discovery is a ticking clock—its activation signals the next phase of the attack, raising the stakes for the entire Space Wheel.
The shattered plants and splintered shelving littering the Power Room floor serve as visceral evidence of the sabotage that claimed Rudkin’s life. The wreckage is not random but deliberate—twisted metal frames and crushed foliage suggest a violent struggle, reinforcing the idea that Rudkin’s death was an act of targeted destruction. The debris creates a chaotic, tension-filled atmosphere, heightening the sense of urgency as Duggan and Corwyn process the scene. It symbolizes the fragility of the station’s defenses and the immediate danger posed by the Cybermen’s attack.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Power Room, once a controlled hub of the Space Wheel’s energy systems, is now a battleground where the station’s vulnerability is laid bare. The shattered plants and splintered shelving create a chaotic, tension-filled atmosphere, while Rudkin’s corpse lies as a grim centerpiece. The hum of machinery is overshadowed by the weight of sabotage, as Duggan and Corwyn step into the wreckage. The room’s usual function as a power source is now compromised, symbolizing the broader threat to the station’s survival. Its atmosphere is one of urgency and dread, as the discovery of the Cybermat elevates the stakes from personal loss to existential danger.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"DUGGAN: Is he dead?"
"CORWYN: Yes. I'll tell the Controller."
"CORWYN: What's that?"