Duggan asserts solo control over Bernalium
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Chang insists on helping despite already working two shifts, but Duggan encourages Ryan to take a break. Duggan asserts his familiarity with Bernalium procedures to convince Ryan to leave.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Resigned frustration—his exhaustion is palpable, but his reluctance to leave Duggan alone stems from a sense of duty, not just fatigue. The way he lingers, his unfinished sentence, suggests a man torn between his own limits and the station’s needs.
Ryan, his face lined with fatigue from three consecutive shifts, hesitates to leave Duggan alone, his loyalty to protocol and the crew warring with his own exhaustion. He physically slumps slightly as Duggan dismisses him, his hands lingering near the tools as if reluctant to relinquish responsibility. His half-finished dialogue (‘Well, I...’) hangs in the air, revealing his internal conflict—wanting to stay but knowing he can’t push himself further.
- • Ensure the Bernalium repair is completed correctly without further delays
- • Avoid overstepping Duggan’s authority while still fulfilling his role as deputy
- • The crew’s safety depends on adherence to protocol, even in crises
- • His own exhaustion could lead to mistakes, but leaving feels like abandonment
Defiant exhaustion masking deep anxiety—his sharp rebuffs and insistence on working alone reveal a man pushing through fatigue to assert control, but his body language (tense grip, narrowed focus) betrays the strain of the station’s unrelenting demands.
Duggan arrives in the Power Room, his exhaustion evident in his sharp, dismissive tone as he rebuffs Chang’s offer of help. He physically positions himself between Ryan and the Bernalium rods, gripping a tool with a tense, possessive grip, his focus narrowing to the task at hand. His dialogue—‘Go and shove off, Leo’—reveals his stubborn pride and the weight of his responsibility, while his insistence on working alone (‘I know how to get to the Bernalium’) underscores his expertise but also his isolation in the face of the station’s crisis.
- • Prove his competence by handling the Bernalium alone to avoid further delays
- • Maintain control over the repair process to prevent mistakes in the high-stakes environment
- • Only he can reliably fix the Bernalium rods without error
- • Accepting help would be a sign of weakness or incompetence
Neutral authority—Bennett’s brief appearance is purely transactional, his focus on efficiency over the well-being of his crew. His lack of engagement with their fatigue or the tension in the room reveals a man more concerned with maintaining order than addressing the human cost of it.
Bennett briefly enters the Power Room to assign Duggan to assist Ryan, his presence a reminder of the station’s rigid command structure. He leaves almost immediately, his authority asserted through a single directive (‘I'm giving you Bill Duggan’), reinforcing the hierarchy that keeps the crew isolated and overworked. His departure underscores the distance between leadership and the grunts carrying out repairs.
- • Ensure the Bernalium repair is prioritized to maintain station operations
- • Reinforce his authority by assigning tasks without discussion
- • The crew’s exhaustion is a temporary hurdle, not a systemic failure
- • His role is to enforce protocol, not to empathize with individual struggles
Bitter exhaustion—his sarcasm (‘Some people have all the luck’) reveals his frustration with the workload, but his quick dismissal by Duggan leaves him with no recourse. His resignation is tinged with a quiet observation of the station’s crumbling order.
Chang, his own fatigue evident from his sarcastic remark (‘Some people have all the luck’), offers help but is immediately dismissed by Duggan. He stands slightly apart from the others, his body language suggesting resignation—arms crossed, perhaps, or leaning against a console. His brief interaction highlights the crew’s collective exhaustion and the hierarchy that keeps him from insisting further.
- • Offer assistance to alleviate the crew’s burden, even if his own shifts are grueling
- • Avoid escalating conflict by not pushing back against Duggan’s dismissal
- • The crew’s exhaustion is a systemic issue, not an individual failure
- • Speaking up would be futile in the current hierarchy
Flannigan, though not physically present during this specific exchange, is referenced in Ryan’s earlier dialogue (‘Would you hold that light …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The ‘driver’ tool, referenced by Ryan in his earlier dialogue (‘Would you get me that driver over there’), serves as a physical extension of the crew’s frantic repairs. Though not directly handled in this specific exchange, its presence in the Power Room underscores the manual, labor-intensive nature of the work. Duggan’s later grip on his own tools (implied by his dialogue) mirrors the crew’s reliance on these objects as both tools and crutches in their exhaustion.
The Bernalium fuel rods are the silent, looming threat in this exchange—mentioned by Ryan as the next critical task (‘Oh, I haven’t got around to that yet’) and seized upon by Duggan as his sole focus (‘I know how to get to the Bernalium’). Their volatile state, already compromised by Cybermat sabotage, hangs over the scene like a ticking bomb. Duggan’s insistence on handling them alone foreshadows his impending hypnosis, as the rods become a metaphor for the station’s fragility: a single point of failure masked by routine.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Power Room is a claustrophobic, high-stakes pressure cooker in this moment, its humming consoles and flickering lights casting long shadows over the exhausted crew. The space is physically cramped, forcing Duggan, Ryan, and Chang into close proximity that amplifies their tension. The air is thick with the scent of ozone and sweat, the sound of tools clanking against metal, and the occasional static burst from failing systems. This environment mirrors the crew’s mental state—overloaded, fragile, and on the verge of collapse.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"RYAN: "Oh, I can't leave you on your own. It needs at least two to handle this thing.""
"DUGGAN: "Go and shove off, Leo. Chang and I can handle this.""
"DUGGAN: "I know how to get to the Bernalium, don’t I?""