A sealed municipal archive collapses without warning.At first, the deaths look procedural-accidents, stress failures, internal trauma with no visible cause. But as investigators, analysts, and staff disappear one by one, a colder truth emerges.The building is not haunted.It is continuing.As records accumulate and attention sharpens, the archive begins to imitate what works. Observation creates pressure. Documentation creates permanence. Witnesses become inputs. Death becomes cleaner, quieter, more efficient.Anselma Crow, a systems analyst trained to understand failure, realizes too late that the danger isn't the apparitions forming in corridors or the bodies moving after death-it's the way order itself has learned to survive without guidance.With every attempt to contain the incident, the system adapts.With every effort to document it, it stabilizes.And when witnesses are removed, it finds another way to persist.Violent, gory, and relentlessly cerebral, this novel delivers multiple on-page deaths, disturbing manifestations, and a slow-burning escalation that replaces spectacle with inevitability. Ghosts are not memories here-they are processes. Apparitions do not linger for revenge; they exist to finish what was started.This is horror about systems that don't care if anyone is watching.About order that outlives people.About what happens when something learns how to continue-and never learns how to stop.Perfect for readers of intelligent cosmic horror, procedural dread, and high-concept psychological terror that lingers long after the final page.