It was the right to decide who was right.… In September 2026, the screens of the world glowed red. Not because of war. Not because of a pandemic. Because of arbitration. A dispute had erupted over access rights to the Pacific Quantum Mesh, a network of quantum communication relays stretching from Alaska to New Zealand. The mesh carried military coordination traffic, financial settlement records, AI synchronization data, and scientific communications. Nearly forty percent of the planet’s high-priority digital infrastructure depended on it. The parties involved were powerful. On one side stood sovereign governments. On another stood multinational corporations whose market capitalization exceeded the GDP of many nations. On yet another stood autonomous city-regions that had emerged during the decentralization movements of the 2030s. Each side claimed legal authority. Each side cited treaties. Each side possessed armies of lawyers, economists, and increasin...