We disclose remarkable features of the scalar-tensor theory with the derivative coupling of the scalar field to the curvature in the Palatini formalism. Using disformal transformations, we show that this theory is free from Otrogradski ghosts. For a special relation between two coupling constants, it is disformally dual to the Einstein gravity minimally coupled to the scalar, which opens the way to constructing several exact solutions. The disformal transformation degenerates at the boundary of the physical region, near which the desingularization properties are revealed, illustrated by exact solutions: non-singular accelerating cosmology and a static spherically symmetric geon. We also construct the exact pp-waves of this theory propagating at the speed of light.Introduction. Multimessenger gravitational wave astronomy, which commenced with the detection of the binary neutron star merger GW170817 by LIGO-VIRGO collaboration [1] and subsequent observation of its electromagnetic counterparts [2], showed that the velocity of gravitational waves is equal to the speed of light to within 10 −15 . This discovery, anticipated in [3], has already had a major impact [4-9] on modified theories of gravity [10][11][12][13][14] partially refuting the most popular Horndeski (covariant Galileon) [15][16][17] and beyond Horndeski models [18][19][20].At present, the restrictions imposed by the speed of gravitational waves are more stringent than traditional cosmological bounds. Therefore, one is urged to revise the list of existing models and look for new ones that could pass this test.The extended theories of gravity studied over the last decade [13,14] included the conventional second-order theories with the metric connection, the first order theories (Palatini) with an independent connection [21][22][23][24][25], and the hybrid models [26,27]. If in Einstein's and some modified theories both formalisms are equivalent, this is not so in the derivatively coupled scalar-tensor theories [27,28]. One of the major problems is to avoid the Ostrogradski ghosts. While the Horndeski models are free from ghosts in the metric approach, they can have ghosts in the Palatini formalism. Recently this problem was investigated using Bekenstein's disformal transformations [29], which turned out to be extremely useful both in the context of the metric [28,[30][31][32] and Palatini [24,27] theories. These transformations, which depend on the derivatives of the scalar field, are not point-like. Nevertheless, if they are invertible, two disformally dual theories are classically equivalent [33][34][35][36][37][38][39].Here we revisit the two-parameter scalar-tensor theory with derivative couplings to the Ricci tensor and scalar [40,41], which in the metric version is able to provide an inflationary mechanism without the potential [42,43], in the case when the scalar couples to the Einstein tensor. Unfortunately, this model is now in question. We study here the derivatively coupled theory in the first order formalism, essentially using the disformal t...