'As I am,' Kenny said. 'You were the one who was asking about me and Anna.'

 She remained silent, pretending dignity. He continued to grin, and she knew he wasn't fooled in the least.

 'Well, anyway, the problem is having a life-support system for a naked brain.' He shrugged. 'Can't quite manage that, putting a whole body into a life-support shell is still the only way to deal with trauma like yours. And we can't fit that into a human-sized body.'

 'Oh, you could make us great big bodies and create a whole race of giants,' she joked. 'That should actually be easier, from what you've told me.'

 He cast his eyes upwards, surprising her somewhat with his sudden flare of exasperation. 'Believe it or not, there's a fellow who wants to do something like that, for the holos. He wants to create giant full-sensory bodies of, oh, dinosaurs, monsters, whatever. Hire a shell-person actor, and use the whole setup in his epics.'

 'No!' she exclaimed.

 'I swear,' he said, placing his hand over his heart. 'True, every word of it. And believe it or not, he has the money. Holostars make more than you do, my love. I think the next time some brain wants to retire from active ship-service, especially one that's bought out his contract, this fellow just might tempt them into the holos.'

 'Amazing. Virtual headshaking here.' She thought for a moment. 'What would the chances be of creating a life-sized body with some kind of brainstem link to the shell?'

 'Like a radio?' he hazarded. 'Hmm. Good question. A real problem; there is a lot of information carried by these nerves. You'd need separated channels for everything, but, well, the effective range would be very, very short, otherwise you run the risk of signal breakup. That turned out to be the problem with this rig,' he finished, nodding at his armored legs.' It has to stay in the same room with me, otherwise, Greek frieze time.'

 She laughed.

 'Anyway, the whole rig would probably cost as much as a brainship, so it's not exactly practical,' he concluded. 'Not even for me, and they pay me very well.'

 Not exactly practical for me, either, she thought, and dismissed the whole idea. Practical, for a brainship, meant buying out her contract. After all, if she wanted to be free to join the Institute as an active researcher and go chasing the EsKays on her own, she was going to have to buy herself out.

 'Well, money, that's the other reason I wanted to talk to you,' she said.

 'And the bane of the BB program rears its ugly head,' he intoned, and grinned. 'Oh, they're going to hate you. You're just like all the rest of the really good ones. You want to buy that contract out, don't you?'

 'I don't think there are too many CS ships that don't really plan on doing it someday,' she countered. 'We're people, not AI drones. We like to have a choice of where we go. So, do you have any ideas of how I can start raising my credit balance? Moira has kind of cornered the market on spotting possible new sites from orbit and entry.'

 'Gave her the idea, did you?' Kenny shook his finger at you. 'Don't you know you should never give ideas away to the competition?'

 'She wasn't competition, then,' Tia pointed out

 'Well, you have a modest bonus from the Zombie Bug run, right?' he said, scratching his eyebrow as he thought 'What about investing it?'

 'In what?' she countered. 'I don't know anything about investing money.'

 'Operating on my own modest success in putting my own money into Moto-Prosthetics, and not in paper stock, my dear, but in shares in the company itself, if you use your own knowledge to choose where to invest, the results can be substantial.' He tapped his fingers on the side of his chair. 'It's not insider trading, if you're thinking that I would consider putting your money where your interest and expertise is.'

 'Virtual headshaking,' she replied. 'I have no idea what you're getting at. What do I know?'

 'Look, 'he said, leaning forward, his eyes bright with intensity. 'The one thing an archeologist is always cognizant of is the long term, especially long-term patterns. And the one thing that most often trips up the sophonts of any race is that they are not thinking in the long term. Look for what a friend of mine called 'disasters waiting to happen', and invest in the companies that will be helping to recover from that disaster.'

 'Well, that sounds good in theory,' she said doubtfully. 'But in practice? How am I going to find situations like that? I'm only one person, and I've already got a job.'

 'Tia, you have the computing power of an entire brainship at your disposal,' Kenny told her firmly. 'And you have access to Institute records for every inhabited planet that also holds ruins. Use both. Look for problems the

Вы читаете The Ship Who Searched
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ОБРАНЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату