And somewhere far away, satellites watched—not for ships, not for missiles— —but for patterns.… They called it a duel, but nobody in the street believed in duels anymore. In the port city of Khor Fakkan, on the edge of a sea that had stopped behaving like a sea, the crowds gathered anyway. Two men stepped out of a low, fluorescent-lit logistics office—one in a faded U.S. contractor jacket, the other in the gray coveralls of a shipping broker. They walked into the empty container yard between stacked steel boxes painted with the logos of companies that had quietly suspended operations weeks ago. Everyone nearby—dockworkers, insurance adjusters, satellite analysts on temporary assignment—instinctively backed away. They knew the ritual. The two men faced each other. Hands hovered near their devices—not pistols, not anymore, but hardened tablets wired into maritime routing systems. Whoever “drew” first would reroute a convoy: tankers, LNG carriers, maybe even on...