2953-09-03 – Tales from the Service: A Coronach for Hire 


Callisto Seyer shook her head and crossed her arms. “No way, boss. I’m not getting into that thing. It’s a damned deathtrap.” 

“Come on, Callisto.” Alfred Demirci held out his hands. “The techs need a test pilot and you’re the only one we’ve got who will fit.” 

Callisto cast her eyes on the egg-shaped fuselage and curving, blade-thin weapons pylons of the Coronach on landing pad number five. The company had reeled the thing in during a salvage sweep late the prior year, mostly intact, its pilot dead of apparently sudden decompression. Nine months later, though, it still hadn’t flown, except for a few fly-by-wire systems checks. They’d quickly learned that one of the ways The Incarnation had made its flagship interceptor so small and agile was doing away with physical controls and relying on a direct digital interface through the pilot’s implants. There wasn’t even a viewpanel; the pilot’s vision was purely through the craft’s outer cameras, mediated again by neural implant software. 

Demirci Defense was, as mercenary outfits went, reasonably well funded, though, and Captain Demirci could afford some of the best techs money could buy. They’d quickly rigged up a compact set of controls and a display helmet to show the pilot their surroundings and their sensor plot in one integrated view, just as a real Coronach pilot probably saw it.  

They’d tested the setup on the pad several times, and all the control elements responded, but none of the techs could squeeze inside the equipment-cramped cockpit shell sufficiently to seal it over them for a test flight. 

That, of course, left Callisto, the smallest pilot in the company. Even she wasn’t sure she’d fit, certainly not comfortably. If she did fit, no doubt the skipper would take away the roomy cockpit of her De Rochs Oberon gunship and force her to fly it into combat. 

There was some appeal to the Coronach, of course – it had the handling characteristics of a top-end Core Worlds racer, and a nose-gun that would make even the biggest gunship proud. The idea of sitting hunched over in a tiny metal egg for hours and hours just wasn’t worth the few minutes of combat superiority, though, at least not to Callisto. 

“Relieve the hull and give me another half meter to stretch out.” She scowled. “Then I’ll think about it.” 

She knew of course that this couldn’t be done. The cockpit of the Coronach was small because critical systems surrounded it on all sides. Even the armored hatch allowing the pilot to enter was run through with systems cabling and electrical conduits to the point one couldn’t even start the gravitic drive with the hatch open. 

“Just take it out for a spin. Ten minutes to get the techs some data.” Demirci pressed his hands together. “I’ll hire a dwarf or an Atro’me to fly it into combat.” 

“Ten minutes for something to go wrong?” Callisto turned away. “With no ejection system, and no way to even bail out if there’s a problem?” 

“I’ll send out the tug. Travis will be right behind you the whole time.” 

This was little comfort, of course, since the recovery tug couldn’t actually open the Coronach’s hatch to let her out if she was trapped. It would have to run her back into the hangar and let the techs pry her out, and by then she’d probably be quite dead. 

Evidently realizing that she knew the risks well enough to know the presence of the tug was not an effective safeguard, Demirci sighed. “Fine. How about money?” 

Callisto winced. In the end, that was the language which could make her suspend all her reservations. “How much?” 

“The test data for a ten minute flight is worth at least fifteen thousand credits.” Demirci hesitated. “This thing, it’s more than a prestige piece. If we can be the first to market on a functional conversion kit for these things-” 

Callisto smiled. It was only too like Alfred Demirci to be thinking of turning a short-term windfall into a long-term war profiteering racket. He was probably right; how many captured Coronachs were gathering dust at that very moment because no self-respecting human would intermesh electronics with his nervous system? 

“Fifteen thousand for the flight.” Callisto spun around, holding up two fingers. “And two percent of profit from the kits, if any. In writing, filed on the datasphere, before I so much as put my flight suit on.” 

Demirci was silent for several seconds. “If you’re getting cut in on the profits... Ten thousand for the flight. Option for more test flights at ten thousand each, safety permitting, your veto on safety grounds only.” 

Callisto stuck out her hand. “Done, boss.” She would probably regret that, but ten thousand credits for less than an hour of flight-suit time, possibly repeating, was enough to make her put up with almost any unpleasantness. “But I still ain’t taking the thing out to fight.” 

“Certainly not yet.” Demirci took Callisto’s hand. "Besides, by the time we’ve got the kinks worked out, you might even like the thing." 

Callisto scowled. He was probably right about that, and she hated that he was. 


The ubiquity of the IN Coronach in battle spaces across the Coreward Frontier and Sagittarius Frontier means that dozens, perhaps hundreds, of the craft have been captured in working order, both by the Confederated Navy and by its auxiliaries. Many thousands of tons of spare parts have also been acquired, enough to keep many of these craft operational for years of combat. 

This being a resource that was otherwise untapped, after Confederated analysts learned all they could from these machines, the Navy elected to sell off most of its Coronach stocks to mercenaries and Coreward Frontier militia squadrons earlier this year. The first two Confederated squadrons, one mercenary and one a local militia, to enter full service with Coronachs certified with their craft last week. Both have their machines modified with the Demirci Defense Coronach retrofit package, purchase of which the Navy is heavily subsidizing. I have heard it said that at least four other Coronach squadrons (probably all militia) are preparing to enter operations with this captured equipment, but this is not an official number. There may be more. 

[N.T.B. - I’m not sure these squadrons will ever be front line units. The Coronach is fragile for a combat unit, and the strike crew I’ve talked to would keep their Pumas and Magpies even if they had the choice, trusting in these rugged craft to keep them alive even against more maneuverable, well-armed foes.]