“Mr. Havelock,” she said. “A blockchain is a chain. Chains break. A silo is a seed. It only grows if someone plants it. I am the soil.”
The paradox of Renee is this: she is the most secure woman in the world, yet she is also the most vulnerable. One stray lightning strike, one undiagnosed aneurysm during her descent down those 270 rungs, and the silo becomes a tomb. All those secrets—the passwords, the apologies, the last photographs of dead children—would sit in the dark, perfectly preserved and perfectly inaccessible. Her security is absolute, but it is also a prison. renee securesilo
To protect the silo, Renee has no internet connection, no smartphone, no social security number that the modern world can trace. She pays her property taxes in cash, delivered in person to the county treasurer every November 15th, a date she has not missed in thirty years. She drives a 1987 pickup truck with a manual transmission and no electronic control unit. She is, for all practical purposes, a ghost living on top of a mountain of truths. Chains break
The Keeper of the Concrete Womb