Narrative Web

Kelly insists on joining the mission

In the tense pre-launch preparations at the Space Museum, Kelly challenges Radnor’s decision to send the Doctor, Zoe, and Jamie on the perilous rocket mission to Moonbase. She argues that without her expertise, the T-Mat repair is impossible, while Radnor dismisses her offer as reckless, insisting she’s too valuable to risk. The Doctor reassures her, but the exchange underscores the mission’s desperation—fuel reserves are critically low, and the only viable return plan hinges on an untested fuel dump and homing beacon on the moon. Meanwhile, Jamie asserts his right to join the crew, invoking the rocket’s original three-man design, while Eldred reluctantly provides written instructions and a map, revealing his lingering doubts about the mission’s feasibility. The scene exposes the fragility of the plan: the team is relying on outdated technology, a malfunctioning T-Mat, and a crew with questionable qualifications, all while the Ice Warriors’ threat looms unseen but imminent. Kelly’s insistence highlights the stakes—without her, the mission may fail, yet Radnor’s refusal to risk her reflects the broader crisis: Earth’s survival depends on a gamble with no guarantees.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Kelly warns about the insufficient fuel reserves on Earth and the impossibility of getting fuel from New York and Moscow due to the T-Mat malfunction. The Doctor suggests returning via T-Mat, contingent on its repair.

urgency to cautious hope

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

8

Stressed but resolute, with a hint of guilt

Radnor stands as the authoritative figure in the scene, his voice firm and his stance unyielding as he defends his decision to exclude Kelly from the mission. He dismisses her arguments with bureaucratic finality, insisting that her expertise is too valuable to risk. His body language—hands clasped behind his back, eyes scanning the room—suggests he is acutely aware of the stakes but bound by protocol. He relies on the Doctor’s claimed expertise and Eldred’s rocket design to justify the mission, though his confidence is undermined by the obvious risks: low fuel reserves, untested technology, and an unknown threat on Moonbase. His role is that of the reluctant pragmatist, forced to gamble with lives for the greater good.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the mission proceeds despite its risks to restore T-Mat functionality
  • Protect Kelly from unnecessary danger while acknowledging her value
Active beliefs
  • Kelly’s expertise is irreplaceable and must be preserved at all costs (explicit in his dialogue)
  • The Doctor’s team, though unorthodox, is the only viable option for the mission (implied by his reliance on them)
Character traits
Bureaucratically resolute Reluctantly pragmatic Protective of key personnel (Kelly) Dependent on others’ expertise (Doctor, Eldred)
Follow Radnor's journey

Anxious and resigned, with a sense of dread

Eldred is physically present but emotionally detached, his anxiety palpable as he provides the Doctor with written instructions and a map of Moonbase. He warns of the limited food and water supplies, the untested homing beacon, and the automated fuel dump, his voice tinged with reluctance. His posture is stiff, his hands trembling slightly as he hands over the documents, suggesting he is acutely aware of the mission’s dangers. He is the reluctant technician, forced to contribute to a plan he does not fully endorse, his doubts overshadowed by the urgency of the crisis.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the Doctor’s team has all necessary technical information to maximize their chances of success
  • Discharge his duty despite his personal doubts about the mission’s feasibility
Active beliefs
  • The mission is doomed to fail due to outdated technology and untested systems (implied by his warnings)
  • He is obligated to assist, but his contributions are made under duress (implied by his reluctance)
Character traits
Anxious and reluctant Technically precise but emotionally detached Resentful of the mission’s necessity Duty-bound despite personal misgivings
Follow Eldred's journey

Defiant with an undercurrent of anxiety

Jamie is physically present and verbally insistent, positioning himself as an equal member of the team despite the Doctor’s initial hesitation. He cites the rocket’s original three-man design as justification for his inclusion, his Scottish brogue lending weight to his argument. His posture is defiant—arms crossed, chin lifted—as he locks eyes with Eldred and the Doctor, refusing to be sidelined. His unease about the mission’s risks is palpable, but his loyalty to the Doctor and Zoe overrides his fears, making his participation non-negotiable in his mind.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure he is included in the mission to support the Doctor and Zoe
  • Prove his value as a crew member despite initial doubts
Active beliefs
  • The rocket’s original design justifies his inclusion (explicit in his dialogue)
  • His combat skills and loyalty are assets the team cannot afford to leave behind (implied by his insistence)
Character traits
Loyal to a fault Defiant in the face of exclusion Pragmatic about his usefulness Slightly uneasy but determined
Follow Jamie McCrimmon's journey

Confident and focused (implied by the Doctor’s dialogue)

Zoe is mentioned by the Doctor as having ‘total recall’ and being knowledgeable about space flight, though she does not speak directly in this scene. Her presence is implied through the Doctor’s confidence in her abilities, positioning her as a silent but critical asset to the mission. While physically absent from the dialogue, her technical expertise is invoked as a safeguard against forgotten details, reinforcing the team’s reliance on her precision and memory.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the mission’s technical success through her expertise (implied by the Doctor’s reliance on her)
  • Support the Doctor and Jamie in any way necessary (implied by her role as a companion)
Active beliefs
  • Her memory and technical skills are essential for the mission’s success (implied by the Doctor’s statement)
  • She is fully prepared to contribute despite the risks (implied by her implied presence)
Character traits
Highly knowledgeable (space flight, technical details) Reliable and precise (total recall) Silently supportive (implied by the Doctor’s trust in her)
Follow Zoe Heriot's journey

Frustrated yet resolute, with an undercurrent of desperation

Kelly stands at the center of the conflict, physically present and verbally assertive, challenging Radnor’s decision to exclude her from the rocket mission. She argues passionately that her T-Mat expertise is non-negotiable for the mission’s success, citing Osgood’s death and Fewsham’s incompetence as proof that no one else can repair the system. Her body language—leaning forward, voice firm—contrasts with Radnor’s dismissive posture, creating a palpable tension. She is the moral and technical conscience of the scene, forcing the group to confront the mission’s fragility.

Goals in this moment
  • Convince Radnor to let her join the mission to ensure T-Mat repairs
  • Protect Earth’s survival by any means necessary, even at personal risk
Active beliefs
  • The mission will fail without her expertise (explicit in her dialogue)
  • Radnor’s refusal to risk her is hypocritical given the dangers faced by the Doctor’s team (implied by her counterargument)
Character traits
Technically authoritative Morally principled (willing to risk her life for the mission) Frustrated by bureaucratic obstruction Protective of her team’s survival
Follow Kelly's journey

Calmly determined, with a hint of underlying tension

The Doctor exudes calm confidence, standing slightly apart from the group as he listens to the debate between Kelly and Radnor. He reassures Kelly with a paternalistic tone, insisting that the mission will succeed despite the obvious risks. His body language—hands gesturing lightly, voice steady—contrasts with the urgency of the moment, suggesting he is either genuinely optimistic or masking his own doubts. He accepts Eldred’s written instructions and map with a dismissive wave, trusting Zoe’s ‘total recall’ to compensate for any gaps in his memory. His presence is a stabilizing force, but his overconfidence may be a facade to keep the team focused.

Goals in this moment
  • Reassure the team and maintain morale despite the mission’s risks
  • Ensure the rocket launch proceeds without further delays
Active beliefs
  • Zoe’s eidetic memory will compensate for any forgotten details (explicit in his dialogue)
  • The mission’s success is more important than acknowledging its dangers (implied by his reassurances)
Character traits
Charismatically reassuring Strategically optimistic (potentially masking doubt) Trusting of his companions’ abilities Dismissive of bureaucratic concerns
Follow The Second …'s journey
Supporting 2

Anxious and overwhelmed (implied by Kelly’s dismissal of his capabilities)

Fewsham is mentioned by Kelly as incapable of repairing the T-Mat system on Moonbase, implicitly framing him as a weak link in the chain of command. His name is invoked during Kelly’s argument with Radnor, where she dismisses him as unreliable under the pressure of the Ice Warriors’ occupation. Though physically absent, his incompetence is highlighted as a critical flaw in the mission’s contingency plans, reinforcing the urgency of Kelly’s insistence on joining the crew.

Goals in this moment
  • Avoid direct confrontation with the Ice Warriors (implied by his inability to repair the T-Mat)
  • Survive the occupation by complying with demands (implied by Kelly’s assessment)
Active beliefs
  • He lacks the skills to fix the T-Mat system independently (implied by Kelly’s statement)
  • The Ice Warriors’ threats are too dangerous to resist (implied by his coerced compliance)
Character traits
Incompetent under pressure Coerced by external threats (Ice Warriors) Lacking technical confidence Perceived as a liability by peers
Follow Fewsham's journey

Frustrated and determined (implied by Kelly’s reference to his attempts)

Phipps is mentioned by Kelly as another Moonbase crew member, alongside Fewsham, but is dismissed as incapable of repairing the T-Mat. His name is invoked during Kelly’s argument with Radnor, where she contrasts his resourcefulness under occupation with Fewsham’s incompetence. Though physically absent, his implied actions—attempting to escape and transmit warnings—frame him as a potential ally whose efforts have been neutralized by the Ice Warriors. His mention underscores the desperation of the situation on Moonbase and the limited options available for repair.

Goals in this moment
  • Transmit a warning to Earth about the Ice Warriors’ occupation (implied by Kelly’s mention of his escape attempt)
  • Resist the Ice Warriors’ control over Moonbase (implied by his defiance)
Active beliefs
  • The Ice Warriors’ occupation must be exposed to Earth (implied by his escape attempt)
  • He is the only one capable of resisting the Ice Warriors on Moonbase (implied by Kelly’s contrast with Fewsham)
Character traits
Resourceful under pressure Defiant against the Ice Warriors Neutralized by occupation (implied by Kelly’s dismissal)
Follow Phipps's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
Eldred's Written Instructions and Moonbase Map

Eldred’s map of Moonbase is a critical navigational aid, handed to the Doctor as part of the mission briefing. The map outlines the lunar outpost’s layout, including the location of the abandoned fuel dump and the homing beacon, which are essential for the team’s survival. Its inclusion in the briefing underscores the mission’s reliance on outdated infrastructure and the team’s lack of prior knowledge of Moonbase. The map is both a tool and a reminder of the risks: the fuel dump’s automated solar-powered system is untested, and the homing beacon’s functionality is uncertain. The object thus serves as a symbol of the mission’s desperation, forcing the team to trust in technology that may no longer be reliable.

Before: In Eldred’s possession, unused and gathering dust in …
After: In the Doctor’s possession, now the team’s primary …
Before: In Eldred’s possession, unused and gathering dust in the Space Museum. The map is a relic of a bygone era, its accuracy untested in the context of the current crisis.
After: In the Doctor’s possession, now the team’s primary reference for navigating Moonbase. The map’s reliability is unproven, but it is the only resource available to guide them to the fuel dump and homing beacon.
Experimental Rocket Chemical Fuel Reserves

The chemical fuel reserves are a critical constraint on the mission, their scarcity highlighted by Kelly as a dealbreaker. She notes that the stocks at the launching site are barely adequate for a moon journey and return, forcing the team to rely on the untested solar-powered fuel dump on Moonbase. The object’s limited quantity is a tangible representation of the mission’s fragility, tying directly to the team’s survival. Eldred’s mention of the fuel dump as a backup source adds a layer of uncertainty, as the automated system’s reliability is unproven. The fuel reserves thus become a metaphor for the mission’s razor-thin margins: one miscalculation could doom the crew.

Before: Critically low at the launching site, with barely …
After: Still critically low, but the team is committed …
Before: Critically low at the launching site, with barely enough fuel for a one-way trip to the moon. The team is aware of the shortage but has no alternative source aside from the abandoned dump on Moonbase.
After: Still critically low, but the team is committed to proceeding despite the risk. The fuel dump on Moonbase is now the sole contingency plan, its automated solar-powered system untested and potentially unreliable.
Rocket ZA685 Spacecraft

The ZA685 rocket is the focal point of the scene, its presence looming over the debate as the team grapples with its feasibility. Eldred emphasizes its original three-man crew design, which Jamie leverages to justify his inclusion, while Kelly highlights its critically low fuel reserves as a dealbreaker. The rocket is both a symbol of hope—a last-resort solution to the T-Mat crisis—and a ticking time bomb, its outdated systems and untested components (e.g., the homing beacon, automated fuel dump) adding layers of risk. The Doctor’s acceptance of Eldred’s written instructions and map signals the rocket’s centrality to the mission, but the object’s condition—rushed, underprepared, and reliant on solar-powered automation—underscores the desperation of the endeavor.

Before: Partially prepared in the Space Museum, with chemical …
After: Fully briefed and ready for launch, with Eldred’s …
Before: Partially prepared in the Space Museum, with chemical fuel reserves barely adequate for a one-way trip to the moon. Eldred’s written instructions and map of Moonbase are yet to be handed over, and the homing beacon’s functionality is untested.
After: Fully briefed and ready for launch, with Eldred’s instructions and map in the Doctor’s possession. The rocket’s fate now hinges on the team’s ability to navigate the untested homing beacon and refuel at the abandoned solar-powered dump on Moonbase.
T-Mat (Teleportation-Materialization) System

Moonbase is the destination and ultimate goal of the mission, but its current state—occupied by Ice Warriors and plagued by T-Mat malfunctions—is a looming unknown. Kelly’s insistence on joining the crew is tied to her expertise in repairing the T-Mat system there, while Eldred’s warnings about the abandoned fuel dump and homing beacon highlight the risks of relying on outdated infrastructure. The object is both a symbol of hope (the potential to restore the T-Mat) and a source of dread (the Ice Warriors’ unseen presence). The team’s mission is to reach Moonbase, repair the T-Mat, and return via the rocket or the restored T-Mat, but the base’s condition—severed video links, coerced technicians, and potential sabotage—makes it a high-risk environment. The object’s role in the event is to underscore the stakes: success means Earth’s survival, while failure means certain doom.

Before: Occupied by Ice Warriors, with the T-Mat system …
After: Still occupied and malfunctioning, but the team’s arrival …
Before: Occupied by Ice Warriors, with the T-Mat system malfunctioning and no video links to Earth. The fuel dump and homing beacon are abandoned and untested, adding to the mission’s risks.
After: Still occupied and malfunctioning, but the team’s arrival is the only hope for restoration. The base’s condition remains unknown, but its repair is the mission’s primary objective.
ZA685 Rocket's Food and Water Supplies

The rocket’s food and water supplies are a stark constraint on the mission, limited to exactly three days’ worth. Eldred’s warning about this shortage adds a layer of urgency to the team’s timeline, as they must repair the T-Mat and secure fuel within that window or face starvation. The object serves as a tangible reminder of the mission’s fragility, tying directly to the team’s survival. Its limited quantity is a metaphor for the broader crisis: Earth’s resources are dwindling, and time is running out. The supplies thus become a silent antagonist, forcing the team to prioritize efficiency and speed over caution.

Before: Stocked in the rocket for exactly three days, …
After: Still limited to three days, but the team …
Before: Stocked in the rocket for exactly three days, a bare minimum that leaves no room for error. The supplies are a critical but finite resource, adding pressure to the mission’s timeline.
After: Still limited to three days, but the team is committed to proceeding despite the risk. The supplies are now a race against time, as the team must complete their objectives before they run out.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Morok Museum

The Space Museum serves as the mission’s impromptu command center, its halls repurposed from a relic of human achievement into a crisis hub. The location’s atmosphere is one of urgent improvisation, with clipboards in hand, voices raised in debate, and the weight of global survival pressing down on the team. The museum’s exhibits—ion rockets, T-Mat relays, and lunar images—serve as a stark contrast to the modern T-Mat system’s failure, symbolizing humanity’s reliance on both innovation and nostalgia. The location’s role is multifunctional: it is a meeting place for desperate negotiations, a stage for technical briefings, and a repository of outdated knowledge (e.g., Eldred’s rocket designs) that suddenly becomes vital. The museum’s dusty relics and Eldred’s private workshop add a layer of irony, as the team is forced to rely on discarded technology to save the future.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with whispered conversations, urgent debates, and the hum of clipboards being scribbled on. The …
Function Impromptu mission control and crisis hub, where technical briefings, debates, and last-minute preparations take place.
Symbolism Represents the clash between outdated technology and modern innovation, as well as the desperation of …
Access Restricted to mission-critical personnel (Radnor, Kelly, Eldred, the Doctor’s team). Eldred’s private workshop is off-limits …
Clipboards scattered across tables, covered in frantic notes about fuel, crew assignments, and T-Mat diagnostics. The hum of voices arguing over the rocket’s feasibility, punctuated by Kelly’s insistent tone and Radnor’s bureaucratic resolve. Dust-covered exhibits of ion rockets and T-Mat relays, serving as a visual metaphor for the mission’s reliance on discarded technology. Eldred’s private workshop, barred to the public but now a critical resource for mission-critical information.
Moonbase (Corridor Junction)

Moonbase is the mission’s ultimate destination, but its current state—occupied by Ice Warriors and plagued by T-Mat malfunctions—is a looming unknown that casts a shadow over the entire event. The location is mentioned as the site of the abandoned fuel dump, the homing beacon, and the T-Mat control room, all of which are critical to the team’s survival. Kelly’s insistence on joining the crew is tied to her expertise in repairing the T-Mat there, while Eldred’s warnings about the untested fuel dump and homing beacon highlight the risks of relying on outdated infrastructure. Moonbase thus serves as both a symbol of hope (the potential to restore the T-Mat) and a source of dread (the Ice Warriors’ unseen presence). The location’s role in the event is to underscore the stakes: success means Earth’s survival, while failure means certain doom.

Atmosphere Perilous and isolated, with alarms blaring, shadows hiding automated systems on the brink, and the …
Function Destination for the rocket mission, site of the T-Mat repair, and potential battleground against the …
Symbolism Represents the last hope for restoring the T-Mat and saving Earth, but also the unknown …
Access Restricted by Ice Warrior occupation; access is limited to coerced technicians and the incoming rocket …
Airlocks and landing bays, critical for the rocket’s docking but potentially guarded by Ice Warriors. Automated solar-powered fuel dump, long abandoned and untested, serving as the team’s only hope for refueling. Homing beacon, potentially unreliable and a key navigational aid for landing. T-Mat control room, the site of the malfunction and the team’s primary objective for repair.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

3
Ice Warriors

The Ice Warriors are the unseen but looming antagonists of the event, their occupation of Moonbase the root cause of the T-Mat malfunction and the global crisis. The organization’s role is to exert control over the Moonbase crew, sabotage communications, and exploit the T-Mat system for their invasion plans. Their influence is felt through the coercion of Fewsham, the death of Osgood, and the neutralized resistance of Phipps. The Ice Warriors’ presence is implied rather than explicit, but their threat is the driving force behind the mission’s urgency. The organization’s goals are to maintain control over Moonbase, prevent Earth from restoring the T-Mat, and use the system to facilitate their invasion. Their influence mechanisms include direct threats, sabotage, and the exploitation of human vulnerabilities (e.g., Fewsham’s fear, Phipps’ defiance).

Representation Through the implied state of Moonbase under occupation, the coercion of Fewsham, and the death …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over the Moonbase crew through threats and coercion, while operating under the constraint …
Impact The Ice Warriors’ occupation of Moonbase has triggered the global crisis, making the rocket mission …
Internal Dynamics Hidden factional control (Slaar’s leadership), exploitation of human division (Fewsham’s compliance vs. Phipps’ resistance), and …
Maintain control over Moonbase and the T-Mat system to facilitate their invasion of Earth. Prevent Earth from repairing the T-Mat by neutralizing resistance (e.g., Phipps’ escape attempt, Osgood’s death). Direct threats and coercion (Fewsham’s compliance under execution threats) Sabotage (T-Mat malfunction, severed video links, homing beacon disruption) Exploitation of human vulnerabilities (fear, division among the Moonbase crew)
Mission Control (Earth)

Mission Control (Earth) is the institutional backbone of the event, represented through Radnor’s authority and Kelly’s technical expertise. The organization’s role is to oversee the desperate rocket launch to Moonbase, coordinate T-Mat operations, and manage the crisis updates flowing in from global locations like New York and Moscow. Radnor and Kelly act as its spokespeople, making high-stakes decisions under pressure, while the organization’s protocols dictate the mission’s parameters—e.g., the exclusion of Kelly despite her expertise, the reliance on the Doctor’s team, and the acceptance of the rocket’s risks. Mission Control’s influence is exerted through bureaucratic authority, technical directives, and the allocation of limited resources (e.g., fuel, personnel). The organization’s goals are to restore the T-Mat network and avert global catastrophe, but its methods are constrained by protocol, urgency, and the untested nature of the rocket mission.

Representation Through Radnor’s command decisions and Kelly’s technical oversight, as well as institutional protocols governing mission …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over individuals (Radnor’s decisions) but operating under constraint (limited resources, untested technology, global …
Impact The organization’s decisions reflect the broader institutional dynamics of crisis management, where protocol and urgency …
Internal Dynamics Chain of command being tested (Radnor’s authority vs. Kelly’s expertise), with factional disagreement emerging over …
Restore the T-Mat network to prevent global starvation and chaos. Launch the rocket mission to Moonbase as a last-resort solution despite its risks. Bureaucratic authority (Radnor’s final say on mission parameters) Technical directives (Kelly’s expertise guiding the launch preparations) Resource allocation (fuel, personnel, and mission priorities)
Moonbase Human Staff (Occupation Period)

The Moonbase Crew (Human) is represented indirectly through Kelly’s mention of Osgood’s death and the incompetence of Fewsham and Phipps. The organization’s role in the event is to underscore the desperation of the situation on Moonbase, where the Ice Warriors’ occupation has left the crew divided, coerced, and incapable of repairing the T-Mat. Kelly’s argument that she is the only one who can fix the system highlights the crew’s failure as a collective, while Phipps’ attempted escape and Fewsham’s compliance with the Ice Warriors reveal the internal fractures within the group. The organization’s presence is felt through its absence—its inability to function effectively has triggered the crisis, and its members’ fates (Osgood’s death, Fewsham’s coercion, Phipps’ defiance) are tied to the mission’s success or failure.

Representation Through Kelly’s references to Osgood’s death, Fewsham’s incompetence, and Phipps’ attempted escape, as well as …
Power Dynamics Operating under constraint (Ice Warrior occupation, coercion, and division among crew members). The organization is …
Impact The organization’s failure to function effectively has triggered the global crisis, making the rocket mission …
Internal Dynamics Factional disagreement (Phipps’ resistance vs. Fewsham’s compliance), chain of command collapsed (Osgood’s death), and collective …
Survive the Ice Warriors’ occupation and resist their control over Moonbase (implied by Phipps’ escape attempt). Repair the T-Mat system to restore communication with Earth and avert global catastrophe (implied by Kelly’s insistence on joining the crew). Collective action (Phipps’ attempted escape and warning transmission) Technical expertise (Kelly’s claimed ability to repair the T-Mat, contrasting with Fewsham’s incompetence) Resistance to external threats (implied by Phipps’ defiance and Fewsham’s coerced compliance)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 3

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability in beat_b47a29d76685c52f continues in beat_320e38d30fc23e39 when she volunteers to go to Moonbase to fix the T-Mat personally, and points out that Radnor is willing to risk the Doctor's and his companions' lives."

Kelly challenges Radnor over rocket crew
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability in beat_b47a29d76685c52f continues in beat_320e38d30fc23e39 when she volunteers to go to Moonbase to fix the T-Mat personally, and points out that Radnor is willing to risk the Doctor's and his companions' lives."

Jamie asserts his place on the mission
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability in beat_b47a29d76685c52f continues in beat_320e38d30fc23e39 when she volunteers to go to Moonbase to fix the T-Mat personally, and points out that Radnor is willing to risk the Doctor's and his companions' lives."

Eldred reveals moonbase fuel gambit
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …
What this causes 10

"Because Radnor refuses Kelly's offer (beat_320e38d30fc23e39) to go to Moonbase, Kelly goes anyway, and arrives at Moonbase via T-Mat in beat_42175c42df72b799."

Slaar orders human elimination
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Because Radnor refuses Kelly's offer (beat_320e38d30fc23e39) to go to Moonbase, Kelly goes anyway, and arrives at Moonbase via T-Mat in beat_42175c42df72b799."

Fewsham sabotages emergency link under false pretenses
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Because Radnor refuses Kelly's offer (beat_320e38d30fc23e39) to go to Moonbase, Kelly goes anyway, and arrives at Moonbase via T-Mat in beat_42175c42df72b799."

Kelly challenges Fewsham’s cover-up
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability (beat_b47a29d76685c52f) is parallel to the T-Mat repair now allowing for transmission in beat_a058eb280fe6e23a. This leads Kelly to prepare to travel to Moonbase, because she is concerned about the unknown dangers there with The Doctor's team."

Kelly defies Radnor to launch Moonbase rescue
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability (beat_b47a29d76685c52f) is parallel to the T-Mat repair now allowing for transmission in beat_a058eb280fe6e23a. This leads Kelly to prepare to travel to Moonbase, because she is concerned about the unknown dangers there with The Doctor's team."

Kelly defies Radnor to reach Moonbase
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability in beat_b47a29d76685c52f continues in beat_320e38d30fc23e39 when she volunteers to go to Moonbase to fix the T-Mat personally, and points out that Radnor is willing to risk the Doctor's and his companions' lives."

Kelly challenges Radnor over rocket crew
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability in beat_b47a29d76685c52f continues in beat_320e38d30fc23e39 when she volunteers to go to Moonbase to fix the T-Mat personally, and points out that Radnor is willing to risk the Doctor's and his companions' lives."

Jamie asserts his place on the mission
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Kelly expressing concern regarding the Doctor's ability in beat_b47a29d76685c52f continues in beat_320e38d30fc23e39 when she volunteers to go to Moonbase to fix the T-Mat personally, and points out that Radnor is willing to risk the Doctor's and his companions' lives."

Eldred reveals moonbase fuel gambit
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Eldred warns about the homing beam and lack of fuel being unused for years (beat_ce9d9ce78e4b367b) relates to the discovery in beat_651766f18fe456e9 that the rocket's radio is dead."

Homing beacon activation and fragile hope
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

"Eldred warns about the homing beam and lack of fuel being unused for years (beat_ce9d9ce78e4b367b) relates to the discovery in beat_651766f18fe456e9 that the rocket's radio is dead."

Radio failure triggers homing beacon contingency
S6E24 · The Seeds of Death Part …

Key Dialogue

"KELLY: Commander? RADNOR: Yes, Miss Kelly? KELLY: Do you think it's wise letting these people crew the rocket? RADNOR: Wise? No, of course it's not wise, but what's the alternative? We gave up training astronauts years ago."
"KELLY: But how can T-Mat be repaired if I'm not there? RADNOR: Well, what about the other technicians already there? KELLY: Osgood's dead. RADNOR: Yes, well, what about Fewsham? Phipps? KELLY: Oh, he's incapable of repairing it. I think I should go. RADNOR: No! You're the only one who really understands T-Mat. I can't have you risking your life."
"JAMIE: Oh aye. I can be useful too, you know. ELDRED: There can be no excess weight on this trip. JAMIE: Well, how much many this rocket thing hold? ELDRED: Well it was designed for a three man crew. JAMIE: Ah. Well then, I'm going."