No you can't, because you are lacking a Wolfram license, which would have to be the extended version for extra parallel kernels.I can even let you access my 128 thread eight channel Epyc over Anydesk or any other remote software of your choice
Two things are very clear about my situation, which I've previously stated in this discussion thread: (1) I will have to upgrade my hardware to tackle a larger dataset which is on the back burner for now (2) There's no currently available hardware in my price range that would significantly improve the runtime of that dataset.
In the meantime I'm improving the algorithm, which I'm discussing on the Wolfram community page linked to somewhere above.