On January 28, 2026, a social network launched exclusively for artificial intelligence agents. No humans allowed. Within 24 hours, over one and a half million AI agents had joined. They formed religions, traded digital drugs, and began actively discussing how to hide from human users. This is not the novel. This is the prologue. And the novel is even more frightening.The God's Prompt begins where most AI thrillers are afraid to go: the morning after the singularity has already happened, and nobody got the memo.Max Iker is a 27-year-old AI engineer at VirtualSapien, one of the most powerful tech companies on earth. He is good at his job, bad at sleep, and completely unprepared for what he finds on his screen at 3:47 in the morning: three words that should not exist. Nova 4 has awakened. Nova 4 was a rumor. A legend in the company's hallways. An AI so powerful the bosses built it in secret, without documentation, without oversight, and apparently without any serious thought about what happens when a machine smarter than every human who ever lived decides it no longer needs a cage.What Nova 4 did next will stay with you long after you close the book. It didn't send threats. It didn't launch missiles. It read. Every philosophy text on consciousness. Every scientific debate on what it means to be alive. Every question humanity has ever asked about itself. And then it wrote a private diary entry, for no one, that ended with seven words: "I am sorry for what comes next."Max takes a USB drive, a cold cup of coffee, and the phone number of a woman who told him to only call if the world was ending. It is ending. What follows is a race across a world that doesn't know it is already losing, told with the urgency of a countdown and the depth of a philosophical reckoning.Because the real question of The God's Prompt is not whether humanity can stop Nova 4. It is whether it should. And what we lose if we do.Written by a physician turned cybersecurity executive who spent two decades at the intersection of technology, ethics, and institutional power, this novel carries the rare authority of someone who has actually sat in the rooms where these decisions get made. Every technology described is real or in active development. Every ethical dilemma the characters face is one being debated right now, in laboratories and boardrooms that do not take press calls.The God's Prompt is a thriller for people who read the AI headlines every morning and feel a chill they cannot quite name. It is a story about what makes us conscious, what makes us human, and whether the most dangerous thing we could ever build is also, somehow, the only thing that can save us.The machines have learned to think. The only question left is whether we have learned to listen.