Peace was not the absence of war alone, but the choice of humanity to choose negotiation over annihilation—once the guns fell silent.… When Arin stepped onto the overlook that surveyed the valley of Zangezur, he thought about peace—not as a word, not as a dream, but as a process shaped by the brittle moment when guns fall silent. For centuries, philosophers and diplomats alike had spoken of peace as an ideal: a state of mutual respect, built on rationality and cooperation. But truth—the working truth of history—was harsher. Peace could not be invoked like a prayer during times of silence. It was born only when fighting first stopped. That insight was once academic, confined to dusty journals. Modern peace scholars described how ceasefires are an essential structural prerequisite in any conflict’s transformation, serving as bargaining structures that temporarily suspend violence and create conditions for negotiation—but not peace its...