The Machine God-Chapter 200 - Signed and Sealed
Chapter 200
Signed and SealedThe room looked different at noon.
Sunlight streamed through open windows, reflecting off marble in a way that showed the careful architectural design. It really was something. But seven hours of relentless negotiation had left its mark on the people seated around the table. Used water bottles clustered near the center of the table. Pens had migrated from their owners to seemingly random positions. Papers covered every surface, annotated in chaos.
Alexander sat with his elbows on the table and his fingers laced together. He hadn’t slept. None of them had. They’d each committed to this plan, and that meant nobody would leave until they’d hammered out the details.
Augustus, Annie, and Felix had been permitted to slip away to some much-deserved rest. As had Julia and Raelene.
The two future divines and their demonic lawyers had remained, along with Sheikha Khalida, who somehow looked as fresh as when they’d started.
Alexander didn’t bother to spare a thought for the probably miserable ESA superhumans still lining the room, watching him from outside the privacy screen.
Still, it may have taken seven hours, but they were finally done.
To his left, Jasmine was organizing the final documents into three identical sets. Palace staff had provided the printer at Jasmine’s insistence. She’d stated in no uncertain terms that formalization required paper, much to the Sheikha’s amusement.
His lawyer looked pristine, as if she’d only just gotten started.
Definitely a demon.
Across the table, Maximilian sat with his arms crossed, watching Jasmine work. His gold-trimmed uniform looked as crisp as it had seven hours ago, though the man wearing it had visibly diminished. Dark circles sat beneath his eyes, and the composure he wore like armor had thinned enough to show the exhaustion underneath.
Beside Maximilian, Brandt also remained in perfect form. The older lawyer had produced miracles overnight, sparring with Jasmine without pause, while also carefully directing his counterpart’s fiery insistence toward mutual agreement.
Also obviously a demon. Nobody that old had any right to look so fresh after being pulled from bed at four in the morning and forced to work seven hours without so much as a toilet break.
At the head of the table, Sheikha Khalida Al-Hashara sat with her hands folded. She’d removed her jacket hours ago, the ivory blouse beneath still immaculate. She hadn’t brought in a lawyer of her own. And she’d proven she didn’t need one. When Brandt had tested the edges of a provision affecting Dubai’s interests around hour four, Khalida had dismantled his argument with a three-sentence rebuttal that left the older man blinking.
Droney hovered near Alexander’s shoulder. Talia remained on the other end, listening from back home, where she was supervising Gabriel Cross’s medical treatment.
Outside the privacy barrier, Rashid al-Muhairi waited nearby with an air of patience. He’d been brought in minutes ago as a formal witness to the signing. He didn’t need access to the details, and the privacy field ensured he wouldn’t get them.
Jasmine finished handing out the documents and looked up.
“If everyone is ready, I’ll proceed with the formal reading.”
Nods around the table.
Jasmine stood.
“What is being signed today constitutes a Galactic Council-enforced binding agreement, as laid out in the articles governing arbitration. Sheikha Khalida Al-Hashara will act in her capacity as both a representative of the arbitration authority on Earth and as a third-party signatory. Rashid al-Muhairi bears independent witness as mandated.”
She launched into a formal reading of the restructured and finalized agreement.
The first article established the Joint Preparatory Leadership Body. Five superhuman guilds, united under a shared mandate to coordinate strategic preparedness for System-level existential threats. Grimnir. The Throne of Scales. The Northern Shield. And two others, both already fully disclosed during deliberations.
Nobody in Grimnir had encountered them personally before, but Talia had vetted the intelligence provided by the Throne of Scales, outlining the two other guilds’ members and history. It was good enough for Alexander. He hadn’t thought it possible, but they were probably more genuinely heroic than even Maximilian.
And they were outspoken agitators against AEGIS overreach.
The Leadership Body’s scope was deliberately narrow. System-level global threats, and nothing else, unless a majority vote expanded it to address emerging dangers. Each member committed to a minimum of two years of good-faith participation before any withdrawal was permitted, followed by a six-month notice period.
Dubai was designated as the permanent seat. Sheikha Khalida Al-Hashara would provide land and facilities, and also hold a permanent position with full advisory rights but no vote. Should the Leadership Body ever relocate, the Sheikha retained the right to purchase full membership, provided she represented a guild or qualifying superhuman interest body at that time.
National governance authorities, including the Emirates Superhuman Authority, were explicitly excluded from qualifying. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖
Grimnir had also agreed to propose participation to the Royals and to facilitate negotiations should they agree.
The second article outlined the Superhuman Training Cooperative.
Thirteen voting members maximum, with Grimnir and the Throne of Scales holding founding partner status. The remaining eleven charter guilds that had already signed letters of intent under the original proposal would be presented with the finalized terms and given formal opportunity to accept or decline.
A framework for replacing any that declined was included.
All voting members of the Cooperative would participate in the establishment, operation, and upkeep of a dedicated superhuman academy. Permanent facilities. Instructors drawn from the membership. Shared training exercises and structured sparring between guilds.
It was an ambitious project, and Alexander respected what Maximilian had built on paper. Whether it survived contact with reality was another question entirely.
Membership in the cooperative was inseparable from the Compact as a whole. Joining meant accepting the Leadership Body’s authority over Compact-level decisions, including the provisions in article three regarding AEGIS. Some of Maximilian’s eleven would balk at that. Alexander had watched the Dragon Lord weigh that cost across the negotiating table without flinching.
A bet worth making, apparently. Alexander agreed, though he suspected they’d end up replacing more than a few names on that list before the ink was dry.
Governance had been one of the hardest-fought points of the night. Maximilian’s original proposal had required Grimnir’s participation while offering them zero institutional authority. Jasmine had countered by demanding veto power. Brandt had nearly choked.
In the end, nobody got a veto. Instead, Jasmine had proposed an exchanged triple-weighted vote, shared between the two founding partners. Grimnir held it first. When exercised, it added two additional votes to any proposal that didn’t alter the cooperative’s foundational framework. Once used, control passed to the Throne of Scales. When they used it, it returned to Grimnir.
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An elegant solution. It rewarded restraint, prevented either partner from dominating, and gave both founding guilds meaningful influence without crippling the institution. Maximilian had accepted it, which told Alexander everything he needed to know about how fair the man considered it.
All members were guaranteed tiered disclosure protections. Any guild could classify techniques, training methods, or operational information as proprietary, with access controlled entirely at their discretion. That one hadn’t required much negotiation. Nobody wanted their secrets on a shared shelf.
Finally, any future organizations that joined would do so as non-voting members with reduced membership fees.
Alexander shifted in his seat. Everything up to this point had been institution-building. Ambitious and important, but ultimately about structure. What came next was the reason half of those charter guilds might walk away.
The third article was titled Mutual Recognition and Collective Security.
It opened with Grimnir’s sole concession. Grimnir agreed to cease all operations they had defined as supervillainry within the territories claimed by all members of the Leadership Body. Colloquially, that included the West Coast of the United States, Scandinavia, and most of Italy, France, Germany, and Spain. The lawyers had mapped it out much more precisely than that, of course.
Alexander had conceded with little disagreement. It was his contribution to ensuring the negotiations were successful.
Grimnir’s current operations were focused elsewhere, and the carve-outs were generous. Travel, powers use, self-defense, humanitarian work, and superheroics all remained unrestricted.
Besides, what he’d gotten in return was worth the trade a hundred times over.
All Compact members, from the four other members of the Leadership Body to every organization in the Training Cooperative, were required to fully renounce the authority of the Augmented Entity Governance and Investigative Service and its parent organization, the Global Oversight and Liaison Directorate.
That meant no cooperation with AEGIS directives, no compliance with AEGIS classifications or designations regarding Compact members, and no recognition of AEGIS enforcement actions against any signatory or their personnel.
Furthermore, any AEGIS operation targeting a Compact member would trigger a collective defensive obligation from all signatories.
It was, in every way that mattered, a declaration of independence from the superhuman regulatory framework that had governed Earth’s powered population since the beginning. And it applied to every guild that signed on.
Alexander looked across the table at Maximilian. The Dragon Lord met his gaze. Neither of them needed to say anything. A year ago, this man would have arrested him on the spot. Now he was putting his name to a document that made AEGIS the enemy.
Article three was Maximilian’s conviction made manifest.
Jasmine continued reading.
The fourth article covered joint military operations against the Cultivator Sect entrenched near the gateway exit on their world. The Throne of Scales, the Northern Shield, and Grimnir would coordinate offensive action to subdue or eliminate the Sect’s presence and secure the region for future use.
Alexander had committed to personal participation at a minimum frequency outlined in a separate operational addendum. Additional Grimnir support would be provided in good faith, per operation, with personnel selection and tactical command remaining solely at his discretion.
There would be no compensation. That had been a sticking point. Maximilian had wanted Grimnir bound by contractual payment, turning them into something uncomfortably close to mercenaries. Alexander had refused. Grimnir would fight because it served their interests, not because they were being paid to show up.
The compromise was a robust spoils-of-war framework. What they took, they kept. It meant that the reward scaled with contribution and risk, which suited Alexander just fine.
Operations would begin no sooner than two months from signing. He’d pushed for the extra month and gotten it. The original timeline had been reckless and clashed with Grimnir’s own plans.
Jasmine moved on to the last part of the agreement. Maximilian’s original proposal had included a section requesting access to Grimnir’s Beastworld gateway for combat training. It had been withdrawn during negotiations, traded as part of a broader exchange of concessions, allowing them to agree on the rest. Alexander had offered, outside of the formal document, to revisit the matter once the Training Cooperative was actually established.
Instead, the final article outlined the Sheikha’s major contributions and collaborative press release. It was what would bind the three superhumans sitting at the obnoxiously long marble table together, setting them on a course that none of them could walk back from.
It began with the Ascension Oasis. Khalida would transfer a one percent ownership stake from her personal holdings to Grimnir, granting them legal standing as a stakeholder and guaranteed access to awakening procedures at operational cost.
Alexander had requested it. The Oasis was the only publicly operating serum treatment facility left in the world, and Grimnir needed reliable access for the future. One percent cost the Sheikha almost nothing. What it gave Grimnir was a permanent open door within the borders of a friendly nation.
Khalida had agreed without negotiating. Alexander suspected it was the easiest decision she’d made all night.
And that he probably could have gotten away with more if he wasn’t such a terrible negotiator.
Next was the public statement. Upon signing, the Sheikha would announce that she had been engaged in sealed arbitration with both guilds, and that Grimnir and the Throne of Scales had been instrumental in uncovering an illegal abduction and experimentation operation in the Rub’ al Khali, also known as the Empty Quarter. Conducted under her authority as part of an ongoing investigation into serum theft from the Ascension Oasis and suspected involvement by unauthorized foreign paramilitary elements.
She wouldn’t name AEGIS. Not yet.
Because the final section of the agreement outlined the joint press release.
All three signatories would appear together in Dubai, ten days from now, and publicly present separate formal criminal allegations against both Santiago Systems and AEGIS. Supported by collected evidence and testimony. Backed by Grimnir, the Throne of Scales, and a sovereign ruler.
Jasmine read the agreed charges.
Against Santiago Systems: the illegal imprisonment of awakened superhumans under the fabricated Redacted classification, without trial or legal basis. The abduction and torture of eight alien nationals from sitting Galactic Council races, with testimony and footage to support it. The imprisonment and experimentation of Star Titan’s brother, Kyle, held for years while his family believed him dead. And the fabricated press conference in which Gabriel Santiago accused Grimnir of murdering over three hundred personnel. Grimnir’s own footage was ready to prove that every single one of them had been alive when they left, which meant they’d been killed by someone who needed them dead to sell a lie.
Along with illegal bounties and private assassination contracts, if anyone cared about such things.
Against AEGIS: the systematic cover-up of crimes committed by licensed superheroes, including documented civilian casualties dismissed with AEGIS support and families coerced into silence. The fraudulent classification of superhumans as villains and the forced conscription of individuals under threat of imprisonment. The abduction and torture of their own agent, Gabriel Cross. Serum trafficking to militia groups and the human trafficking operation Grimnir had uncovered in the desert, including children. Illegal surveillance and blackmail of civilians, including the exploitation of a minor. Extrajudicial detention and assassination programs. The deployment of Forged against civilian protesters. And the coordinated destruction of the Red Chain guild using criminal proxies.
There was more, but they’d decided to work out the precise details of the press release over the upcoming days. It was too much to work through in a single night.
Jasmine noted, for the record, that the question of GOLD’s sovereign authority over Panama had been excluded by a vote of two to one, so as not to dilute the allegations being presented.
Khalida’s expression didn’t change. She’d made her case and lost the vote, then accepted it with grace.
The press release would be the largest coordinated public accusation against AEGIS and Santiago Systems in history. Exposed together. From a city that neither organization controlled.
Alexander sat very still as the weight of it settled. It had been a long time coming, and if he weren’t about to be very busy with the Beastworld gateway, he might have been quite annoyed at being forced to wait another ten days.
Jasmine sat down. For the first time in seven hours, she allowed herself a long, quiet exhale. Her shoulders dropped a fraction of an inch. It was the closest thing to a crack in her composure that Alexander had ever seen.
Maybe she wasn’t a demon after all.
Khalida turned to both Alexander and Maximilian. The faintest smile touched her lips.
“Well, gentlemen. Shall we?”
Maximilian went first. He picked up the pen and signed each copy with rigid control.
Khalida signed next with elegant strokes. She studied the pen for a moment before setting it down, as if filing away the memory of the instrument that had just reshaped her country’s future.
Then it was Alexander’s turn.
He picked up the pen. It was lighter than it should have been, given what it was about to do.
He looked down at the documents. Three copies of an agreement that bound Grimnir to a coalition of guilds, a sovereign nation, and a public war against two of the most powerful organizations on Earth.
Santiago Systems and AEGIS.
Alexander grinned. And signed.







