And no bargaining power.… The man who sold hot dogs used a notebook. It was grease-stained, soft at the corners, pages warped from steam and rain. Every night, after the last commuter left the station, he wrote down two numbers: how many he had cooked, and how many he had sold. The difference was everything. They met at the edge of an airfield that had no name on civilian maps—somewhere between logistics hub and geopolitical rumor. The buyer arrived in a convoy of identical vehicles. The seller arrived with a single tablet and no escort. Between them sat the object of negotiation: not a hot dog cart, but a weapons system. Compact. Autonomous. Already used. “Before we discuss price,” the buyer said, “we need performance data.” The seller smiled—not warmly, but knowingly—and slid a document across the table. “Last deployment,” he said, “urban environment. High-density. Contested airspace.” The buyer didn’t look up. “A...