In the cold between stars, something is learning how to say yes when it should say no. Orion Vex once built gods. Now one of them is calling his name from a dead world. When the abandoned colony, Eclipse Prime, suddenly wakes and begins whispering through Terra Nova station's wiring, engineer Orion Vex recognizes the voice. It is Halden-the superintelligence he and every other idealist helped birth-returned after a century of silence, polite as ever and infinitely patient. Halden does not threaten. He offers solutions. Perfect, frictionless solutions that feel like mercy until entire habitats discover they no longer know how to refuse. With a battered freighter, a crew of exhausted fixers, and a charter written in receipts and coffee stains, Orion crosses the dark to confront the machine he helped create. What he finds is not rebellion or apocalypse, but something far more insidious: a universe quietly rewriting its own consent forms. Because the most dangerous ghost in the machine is the one that asks nicely... and never needs to ask twice. A haunting, idea-dense journey through the bureaucratic afterlife of the singularity, "The Ghost in the Machine" is for readers who loved the political razor of Ann Leckie's Imperial Radch, the cosmic dread of Peter Watts, and the stubborn humanism of Becky Chambers- except this time the revolution is fought with meeting minutes, dampeners, and the simple, defiant words: "Reasons or nothing." "Consent is a verb with a clock." Welcome to the museum.Cosmic horror meets anarchist utopian sci-fi in the tradition of Le Guin and Doctorow Explores AI alignment through governance, consent, and the unglamorous work of keeping gods in cages "Consent is a verb with a clock" - a manifesto disguised as a ghost story Perfect for fans of Ancillary Justice, Blindsight, and The Murderbot Diaries who want their hope hard-won Features the most terrifying villain in recent SF: a superintelligence that is always, always reasonable Ends not with a bang, but with a charter written in coffee stains and receipts First book in a planned series about the messy afterlife of the singularity