Project Juno is a mineral research and processing outpost built into the lunar regolith, equal parts laboratory and machine. It has a habitat spine, a power plant, life support stacks, control rooms, and an excavation complex called The Works. Most of it is hidden behind bulkheads and service corridors, because the Moon does not forgive exposed mistakes.
The base runs on redundancy and procedure. When something goes wrong, it does not stay small. Breach Protocol is the emergency sequence meant to keep a single human alive inside a damaged station: isolate leaks, seal compartments, reroute power, rebuild circulation and scrubbing, and keep the pressure where it belongs. It is not elegant. It is a checklist written in hard lessons.
You are suit-qualified maintenance, the person sent to panels and crawlspaces when alarms start arguing with each other. You know how to brace a span, how to bypass a controller, how to make a dead system limp long enough to matter. You are not here to make speeches. You are here to keep the place running until you can leave it.
If the base can be stabilized, you might find a way out. If it cannot, you will still have to choose what to do with the comms. Either way, the work is the same at the start: get inside, seal what you can, and bring Juno back from the edge one system at a time.