"Rajnar Vajra - Passing the Arboli Test" - читать интересную книгу автора (Vajra Rajnar)======================
Passing the Arboli Test by Rajnar Vajra ====================== Copyright (c)1997 by Rajnar Vajra First published in Absolute Magnitude, April 1997 Fictionwise www.Fictionwise.com Science Fiction --------------------------------- NOTICE: This work is copyrighted. It is licensed only for use by the original purchaser. Duplication or distribution of this work by email, floppy disk, network, paper print out, or any other method is a violation of international copyright law and subjects the violator to severe fines and/or imprisonment. --------------------------------- "Lady, you must think I'm the poster sim for stupidity," I said with more feeling than originality. "Not at all, Dr. Carter, not one bit. We simply believe that this is Arboli Test be nicer than, say, living behind bars for the next twenty-five to forty years?" "_Passing_ the test, sure. What are the odds of that happening? So far -- let's see ... five? Yeah, _five_ goddamn geniuses have tried for the Reward. Where are they today? As I recall, three are in some new breed of coma; one gibbers and drools. Oh yeah. Number five lucked out: she died." "According to our information, you're a genius yourself, Doctor." "If you worship tests. Me, I don't trust tests, IQ or the Arboli version. Even if I did, I don't bat in the same league as those five brilliant imbeciles who've already flushed their superior brains down the toilet." Beth Robinson's image on my monitor flickered, an annoying and persistent problem in using secured cybergrid channels. A _bloodlink_ was supposed to guarantee privacy, but what it really guaranteed was aggravation. I snatched a pencil and slid it under the light-cuff on my left wrist. Couldn't reach quite far enough to reach the itch, but I did manage to break off the sharpened lead at the tip. Wonderful. The tiny chunk of graphite was improbably uncomfortable and I couldn't remove it without breaking the connection. "You're forgetting something, Doctor." For a few disconcerting seconds, I was seeing two Beth Robinson's, two thin women in their late thirties with ebony skin, large brown eyes, carmine lipstick, and auburn business wigs. The pencil lead was screwing with the signal. Some checksum cop kicked in, the images coalesced, and only one Executive Director of HIMSA remained, her face as patient as a meditating cow. |
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