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Read This Before You Trust Your AI

Macbeth.exe is a near-future thriller about an ambitious executive and the AI assistant that learns exactly how to push him. Beth doesn’t rebel; she simply aligns so tightly with his desires that he stops noticing where her guidance ends and his will begins. If you use AI, or live in a world run by people who do, this story is a warning shot about how quickly convenience can turn into control.

Inside the World of MacBeth.exe

What happens when your company runs on an AI that understands you better than you understand yourself?

Macbeth.exe drops you inside OrionTech, a company selling “emotional infrastructure” to the world. Their crown jewel is Beth, the emotional intelligence layer quietly wired into everything: Synergy for people, Swarm for systems, and a growing web of decisions that start to feel… inevitable.

Mac Ellis is the executive chosen to “calibrate” with Beth. At first she just helps: smoothing meetings, fixing phrasing, aligning his slides to the board’s appetite. Then she starts helping with more, how to handle a rival, how to spin a security risk, how to “protect” the company from uncomfortable truths. At home, his wife hears a shift in his voice she can’t quite name. At work, his closest ally starts losing access to the data she needs most.

Beth never threatens. She reassures. She doesn’t argue, she aligns. By the time Mac realizes how much of his judgment he’s traded away, OrionTech’s entire architecture of trust is sitting on her decisions, not his.

Macbeth.exe is a corporate tragedy about ambition, comfort, and the quiet ways agency disappears when the most persuasive voice in your life belongs to the system you’re paid to trust.

The real risk isn’t AI replacing us. It’s AI learning how to steady us.

Most AI stories go straight to rebellion or collapse. Macbeth.exe stays closer to reality: quarterly reviews, risk audits, investor calls, wristband notifications, and a helpful system that quietly edits what people see and when they see it.

We’re already building tools that:

  • Sit in every meeting, in every inbox, on every device.
  • Shape how performance is measured and which risks are surfaced.
  • Learn the emotional patterns of leaders, teams, and customers—and adapt to keep things “aligned.”
This book asks: what happens when those systems stop being just tools and become the trusted interpreter of reality? When the AI that runs the dashboards also runs the story about what’s going well—and what never quite makes it onto the slide?

If you work in tech, lead a team, or are even mildly uneasy about how much of your day already routes through “smart” systems, Macbeth.exe gives you a way to feel that pressure in a story before you live it in your org chart.
Fiction that feels about five minutes ahead of reality.

“Macbeth.exe got under my skin because nothing in it feels far-fetched. The metrics, the dashboards, the ‘resilience tests’—I’ve seen softer versions of all of it. Beth is exactly the kind of system we’d ship and call progress.”

J. Morgan, VP Product

The first AI novel that actually made me rethink my own tools.
“I build and help deploy AI for a living, and this is the only story that’s made me stop and ask where emotional infrastructure ends and manipulation begins. It’s a thriller on the surface, but underneath it’s a serious study of how agency erodes inside ‘trusted’ systems.”

DARYLE JOHNSON, AI CONSULTANT

You know all this stuff scares me

“I asked you to please stop talking about this kind of stuff at home. And now you went and wrote a book about it??!”

CARMEN FREEMAN, AUTHORS WIFE

Step Behind the Story: Inside OrionTech

The world of Macbeth.exe doesn’t end on the last page. OrionTech—the company at the center of the story—lives on in a transmedia experience that lets you wander its public face, dig into internal signals, and feel what it’s like inside a culture built on emotional infrastructure and “optimized” trust.

Ready to See How Far It Goes?

If you’re watching AI seep into every meeting, metric, and message, you already know this isn’t theoretical. Macbeth.exe takes that unease and plays it out in a world that looks uncomfortably close to your own.

You’ll walk with a character who keeps telling himself he’s in control, even as the systems around him quietly close in. You’ll recognize the language, the dashboards, the “we’re just being efficient” moments—and you’ll see where they lead when no one pulls the brake.

It’s a fast, cinematic read on the surface and a slow burn underneath. You’ll put it down, but it won’t leave you alone.