Thanks, Bernard. Let me walk through our segment results for the fourth quarter of 2025, and then I will cover consolidated results, the balance sheet, and our outlook. Rental segment revenue was $3,300,000, up 19% sequentially and 179% year over year, mainly driven by the 23% sequential increase in aviation rentals in line with our commercial expectations. Non-aviation rental revenue increased 18% during the quarter, reflecting improved asset utilization. Our rental segment faced cost overruns driven by insurance costs and equipment rental expense due to equipment needed to support our operations and customer demands, although stronger equipment utilization and favorable aviation rental mix helped offset some of these pressures. The sequential rise in operating costs reduced overall segment profitability. Infrastructure segment revenue was $1,200,000, up 44% sequentially and 231% year over year. Profitability was impacted by fiber execution as Bernard described. Management and oversight changes we have made are focused on ensuring revenue performance flows through to the bottom line going forward. While we expect that there will be an EBITDA overhang on this business through 2026, we are encouraged by the early steps taken by the new leadership team. Accommodations revenue was $2,800,000, up 24% sequentially and up 19% year over year, reflecting higher occupancy. Sand segment revenue was $1,700,000, down 37% sequentially and down 67% year over year. Drilling segment revenue was $500,000, down 80% sequentially and down 38% year over year. Turning to consolidated results. For the fourth quarter of 2025, total revenue was $9,500,000, down 13% sequentially and 6% year over year. For the full year 2025, total revenue was $44,300,000 compared to $45,600,000 in 2024, a year-over-year decline of 3%. Net loss from continuing operations for the fourth quarter was $12,300,000, or $0.26 per diluted share, compared to $0.20 in the fourth quarter of 2024. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations was a loss of $6,800,000 in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to a loss of $6,000,000 in the prior-year period. The underperformance relative to our plan was operationally driven, and we are taking targeted actions across each segment to address it. In our Sand and Drilling segments, cost of services decreased at a significantly lower rate than activity levels, resulting in margin compression driven by reduced utilization and lower fixed cost absorption during the winter slowdown typical in the oil and gas industry. In the Other segment, fully idled operations led to no revenue and only partial cost reductions, creating an unavoidable drag on profitability. SG&A expense during the quarter was $5,700,000, down from $6,900,000 in 2024, a reduction of approximately 17% year over year. On a fully normalized basis, excluding the bad debt expense related to PREPA in 2024, SG&A declined approximately 22%. We have more work to do on the cost structure as we continue to right-size the company for the portfolio we have today, and that remains a priority heading into 2026. Capital expenditures during the quarter were $25,900,000, nearly all directed toward aviation. Eight APUs, two engines, and one small aircraft were acquired during the quarter to bolster capacity and support future contracted deployment. For the full year, aviation accounted for the vast majority of our approximately $70,000,000 in total 2025 CapEx, reflecting our conviction in the return profile and scalability of that platform. Very little capital was allocated to drilling, sand, accommodations, or infrastructure during the year, and we expect that to change meaningfully in 2026 as we high-grade assets, pursue equipment acquisitions that reduce costs, and invest in the operational improvements needed to drive profitability across those segments. At quarter-end, we had $121,600,000 of unrestricted cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities, and total liquidity of approximately $158,300,000 including our undrawn credit facility. Mammoth Energy Services, Inc. remains debt free. This gives us the flexibility to invest across the portfolio, pursue accretive opportunities, and absorb near-term volatility without any balance sheet pressure. Subsequent to quarter-end, we closed the sale of a property in Ohio that previously supported our pressure pumping operations, generating net proceeds of $4,600,000. The asset was no longer in use following our exit from that business, and converting it to cash was the logical next step. We flagged this because we think it is representative of a broader dynamic. There are assets on our balance sheet, some obvious and some less so, that carry value not reflected in where the stock trades. We will continue to identify and monetize positions where we are not generating an adequate return, and we expect to surface additional value through that process over time. Entering 2026, we are constructive on the path ahead, seeing a path to greater than 50% revenue growth in 2026 versus 2025, primarily driven by two main things: a full year of aviation contribution at higher utilization and improved asset utilization across our oil and gas-exposed businesses. To add some detail regarding our aviation portfolio, we nearly doubled the monthly revenue out of the portfolio from $600,000 in December to $1,000,000 in January. Once fully utilized, we believe this portfolio can generate monthly revenue of approximately $1,600,000 per month. On capital allocation, we expect non-aviation CapEx of approximately $11,000,000 in 2026, a mix of maintenance and targeted growth investments across our oil and gas and infrastructure segments. To be direct, we have underinvested in these businesses for several years, and that has been one of the contributors to the cost and performance issues. The investments are going into an existing asset base to address specific inefficiencies with identifiable paybacks. We expect the returns to be meaningful and relatively quick to materialize. We expect 2026 to be a year of inflection for Mammoth Energy Services, Inc.: revenue growth accelerating and positive EBITDA back within reach. We want to be clear on that last point. The current asset base, operated better and supported by the right level of investment, is capable of delivering positive EBITDA. From that foundation, our sights are set on mid-teens EBITDA margins and positive free cash flow as we move into 2027. The path is clear; the work is to execute against it. The macro backdrop in both areas is favorable. Oil and gas demand fundamentals are solid. Activity in our core basins is steady, and we see specific investment opportunities we are actively evaluating. In aviation, leasing demand in the regional market is holding up, and we have capacity coming available as the fleet continues to ramp. Revenue growth is only part of the equation. The priority in 2026 is ensuring that growth converts into EBITDA and cash flow, and we are working to improve operational execution along with deploying additional capital to help improve returns. On behalf of the entire Mammoth Energy Services, Inc. team, thank you to our employees for their continued commitment and to our shareholders for their support. That concludes our prepared remarks. We will now open for questions. Operator, please open the line for questions.