I design the electrical systems for hyperscale data centers. Before 2024 I worked on hospitals and university research buildings. Clean power, redundant feeds, UPS topology. Standard stuff. Then the AI buildout started and everything changed. I've worked on seven facilities now. Four in Texas, two in New Mexico, one in Ohio. Every one was the same: 500+ megawatt campus, multiple utility feeds, on-site substations. The specs were aggressive but not unusual. The load profiles were what got me. A normal data center draws power in a pattern. It fluctuates. Training jobs spin up and down. Cooling varies with ambient temperature. You can model it. You can predict it. These facilities don't draw power in a pattern. They draw power in a curve. A smooth, continuous, accelerating curve. Flat at night. Rising during the day. Higher every week. The load never dips. It never spikes. It just climbs. I asked the lead electrical engineer on the first site what kind of compute load produces a ...
I caught my husband and sister plotting my divorce through an air vent. So I planned my own surprise.
The test was still in my hand. **Two pink lines.** I was standing in my own bathroom, in my own house, shaking like it was thirty degrees outside instead of a warm September evening. And that’s when I heard my husband’s voice through the old vent above our bedroom closet. Low. Careful. The kind of careful you only get when someone doesn't want to be heard. "...she doesn't even suspect anything. We just need six more months. Get through the holidays, get through the refinance, and then I file." And then... my sister’s voice answered him. "Six months, Danny. That's all. Then it's you, me, and this house." I stood there. Positive test in one hand. Phone in the other. And in that moment, I stopped being the woman they thought I was. My name is Rachel. I was 31, married for four years to Danny. We had the classic suburban setup. Four bedrooms, a two-car garage, a golden retriever, and an HOA that fined you if your trash cans stayed out past 6 PM. We look...