Bane of the Xenos.
The Wandering Remnants of a Fallen Empire.
The Craftworlds are not mere starships; they are planetoid‑sized, psychoactive world‑vessels, each one a drifting sanctuary carrying the last great populations of the Asuryani. Forged from wraithbone, a living psychic material, a craftworld behaves almost like a sentient organism — its structures flexing, resonating, and responding to the thoughts of its people.
Once, these vessels were long‑range trade ships, voyaging through the Webway to distant stars. After the Fall, they became lifeboats for a dying civilisation. Each craftworld now bears its own culture, its own traditions, and its own interpretation of what it means to be Aeldari in an age of ruin. They are the last true cities of a species that once ruled the stars.
A Sanctuary of Souls.
At the heart of every craftworld lies the Infinity Circuit, a vast crystalline matrix woven through the wraithbone skeleton of the vessel. This psychic lattice houses the souls of the dead, forming a gestalt consciousness that guides, advises, and empowers the living.
To the Asuryani, the Infinity Circuit is the closest thing they have to an afterlife. Without it, their souls would be torn into the Warp and devoured by She Who Thirsts. Within it, they endure — not as ghosts, but as luminous echoes, forever part of the craftworld’s living spirit.
Some believe that when the last Asuryani soul joins the Circuits, they will awaken Ynnead, the long‑prophesied god of the dead. It is a fragile hope, but it is hope nonetheless.
The Last Defence Against Oblivion.
Every Asuryani carries a Spirit Stone upon their breast — a small, radiant gem that serves as a psychic trap for the soul at the moment of death. Without it, their essence would be lost to Slaanesh. With it, their spirit can be safely returned to the craftworld and joined to the Infinity Circuit.
These stones are more than tools; they are symbols of grief, memory, and survival. Each one contains a life — its joys, its regrets, its battles, its failures. To lose a Spirit Stone is to lose a person forever. To recover one is an act of profound reverence.
In times of dire need, the souls within these stones may even be awakened to pilot wraithbone constructs, though the Asuryani consider this a sorrowful necessity, a step perilously close to necromancy.
Vox Transcript: Brother Cassius, Crimson Fists.
Vox‑Channel: DW‑A/Redacted Location: Sub‑surface cavern network, Bellerophon Transcription begins
Cassius: Vox-link active. Advancing through the lower tunnels now. The air is thick with spores… Orkoid in nature. Recent. They’ve been cultivating here.
Inquisitor: Define “recent,” Brother Cassius.
Cassius: Within the last solar week. Possibly less. I’m finding crude implements — scrap metal hammered into blades, hafts wrapped in fungus‑leather. Typical of feral Orks, but… sparse. Too sparse.
Inquisitor: Elaborate.
Cassius: There should be more. Noise, spoor, territorial markings. A tribe leaves a trail. This feels… abandoned. Or concealed.
Inquisitor: Stay focused on your task. Report what you see, not what you feel.
Cassius: Understood. Proceeding deeper.
(Thirty seconds of movement, armour scraping stone. A faint drip of water.)
Cassius: I’ve reached a widening in the tunnel. Signs of habitation — a crude fire pit, bones, a flattened nest of hides. But only enough for one, perhaps two Orks. Unusual for their kind.
Inquisitor: Describe the markings.
Cassius: Glyphs carved into the wall. Not a full clan‑script. More like… personal sigils. Crude, but deliberate. I’m transmitting visual now.
(Pause. Static crackles.)
Inquisitor: Do not attempt to interpret them. Do not speak them aloud. Retrieve any portable samples and continue.
Cassius: Acknowledged. There is a scrap of vellum wedged beneath the bedding. Orkish scrawl. Ink mixed with—
(He stops. A low exhale.)
Inquisitor: Brother Cassius, report.
Cassius: Apologies. The glyphs on this scrap… they are not like the others. Someone has warned me not to read them. I assume that warning comes from you.
Inquisitor: Correct. Bring it to me intact. Do not attempt translation.
Cassius: Understood. But, Inquisitor… with respect, this hunt feels misaligned. We are tracking one, perhaps two feral Orks. Hardly a threat requiring Deathwatch deployment.
Inquisitor: Your assessment is not required. Your compliance is.
(A long pause. Cassius’ breathing grows tighter, controlled.)
Cassius: Very well. I am returning to the surface. I would prefer to rejoin my kill‑team as soon as possible.
Inquisitor: You will do so when I say you will. Maintain vox‑silence until extraction.
Cassius: …Aye, Inquisitor.
Transcription ends
“Blessed is the mind too small for doubt.”
The Aspects of Khaine’s Many Faces.
“To strike — that is fulfilment distilled into a single perfect moment. Be the first to strike.”
The Path of the Warrior is not a single road but a shattered mirror, each shard reflecting a different facet of Khaela Mensha Khaine. From these shards were born the Aspect Shrines, sanctuaries where Aeldari learn to don the war‑mask and become avatars of their chosen art of death. Each shrine traces its lineage to a Phoenix Lord, a being who embodies the purest expression of that Aspect, their memories and spirits carried forward through the ages in their armour and spirit stones
Phoenix Lord: Asurmen, The Hand of Asuryan
The Dire Avengers are the heart of the Warrior Path — disciplined, resolute, and unbreakable. They are the storm made manifest: not the wild tempest, but the controlled, deliberate strike of a warrior who has mastered patience and precision. Their shrine teaches the art of the perfect counter‑blow, the moment when restraint becomes lethal action.
Asurmen’s title, The Hand of Asuryan, speaks to divine authority — the first warrior to walk the Path, the one who shaped all others. His presence is said to steady the hearts of the Asuryani, for he is the memory of their lost glory made flesh
The Dark Reapers embody the cold inevitability of death. Their armour is heavy, their stride deliberate, their fire relentless. They do not rush, for the grave has no need to hurry. Their shrine teaches the art of annihilation from afar — the patient, merciless scything of the battlefield.
Maugan Ra’s epithet, The Harvester of Souls, is no metaphor. He is the shadow that follows all living things, the whisper that reminds even immortals that endings are absolute.
Phoenix Lord: Amon Harakht
The Eagle Pilots are the unseen guardians of the heavens, soaring on wings of wraithbone and grace. They are the high wind given form — swift, vigilant, and unerring. Their shrine teaches mastery of aerial combat, where a heartbeat’s hesitation means death.
Amon Harakht’s name carries the weight of ancient myth: a figure associated with the sun’s unblinking gaze, the eternal watcher who sees all from above
Phoenix Lord: (None canonically assigned; often linked to Amon Harakht’s lineage)
The Crimson Hunters are the executioners of the sky, pilots who have walked the Path of the Warrior so long that flight itself becomes instinct. They are vengeance given wings — precise, wrathful, and utterly committed to the kill. Their shrine teaches the art of the perfect strike from above, where speed and fury merge into a single red blur.
Their atmospheric name evokes the image of predators painted in the blood of their foes, streaking across the firmament in pursuit of retribution.
Phoenix Lord: Fuegan, The Burning Lance
Fire Dragons are the embodiment of destructive certainty. They stride into the heart of the enemy with weapons that melt steel and stone, their discipline as fierce as the flames they wield. Their shrine teaches the art of decisive obliteration — the moment when all resistance is reduced to ash.
Fuegan’s title, The Burning Lance, speaks to incandescent fury: a spear of living fire hurled across the ages, forever seeking the foes of the Aeldari
Phoenix Lord: Jain Zar, The Storm of Silence
The Howling Banshees are terror incarnate — swift, graceful, and lethal. Their war‑cry is a psychic blade that shreds courage, their movements a dance of perfect violence. Their shrine teaches the art of the killing strike delivered before the enemy can even raise a weapon.
Jain Zar’s epithet, The Storm of Silence, captures her paradox: a warrior whose scream is death, yet whose presence is as cold and quiet as the void between stars
"To strike! That is fulfilment distilled into a single perfect moment. Be the first to strike"
After‑Action Report
Filed at Watch‑Station (REDACTED)/ Bellerophon / Kill‑Team RHO-Alpha
Execrator‑Chaplain Leandros reporting to Watch‑Master Telion Clearance: Vermillion‑3
Engagement Summary
Upon contact with Aeldari forces within the cavern complex, Kill‑Team Alpha formed a defensive perimeter around Codicier Zael and the attached Inquisitorial asset. Enemy composition consisted of multiple Aspect Warrior cadres: Dire Avengers, Howling Banshees, Fire Dragons, and Dark Reapers providing overwatch. No Harlequin elements engaged at this stage.
The Aeldari initiated hostilities with disciplined, coordinated fire. We returned fire and advanced to close the distance.
Psychic Engagement
Codicier Zael entered an immediate psychic contest with the enemy Farseer. Warp resonance spiked to hazardous levels. Zael reported significant resistance and described the Farseer’s mind as “a blade honed across centuries.”
At 03:19 local, Zael collapsed. Helm‑auspex confirmed a forcible sus‑an induction, triggered externally. No physical trauma detected. Psychic backlash consistent with targeted neural override.
Kill‑Team Alpha repositioned to protect the unconscious Codicier.
Close‑Quarters Fighting
With Zael incapacitated, the Aeldari pressed their advantage.
Dire Avengers advanced in disciplined volleys.
Fire Dragons attempted to breach our line with melta fire.
Howling Banshees executed a flanking manoeuvre, exploiting the moment of Zael’s collapse.
Dark Reapers maintained suppressive fire from elevated positions.
We held formation and executed controlled counter‑assaults. Two Fire Dragons neutralised. One Banshee eliminated at close range. Enemy cohesion remained high despite losses.
Throughout the engagement, Harlequin elements were observed at a distance. They did not intervene. Their attention remained fixed on the Inquisitor.
Critical Event
At 03:27 local, the Farseer disengaged from the battle line and advanced directly toward the Inquisitor. Kill‑Team Alpha attempted to reposition, but the Howling Banshees counter‑charged with precision timing, indicating pre‑cognition or rehearsed foresight.
The Farseer closed to within two metres of the Inquisitor.
Before contact was made, seismic activity shook the chamber. Heat signatures spiked. All combatants — Aeldari and Astartes — halted momentarily.
From the far side of the cavern, the Avatar of Khaine emerged through the haze of molten stone. Armour incandescent. Gaze fixed upon the battlefield.
The Aeldari ceased fire immediately.
Kill‑Team Alpha maintained a defensive posture.
The Avatar paused. Its attention shifted — not to us, not to the Farseer, but toward the active Webway gate behind it.
Without a word, without a gesture, the war‑spirit turned its back on the engagement and strode through the portal. The gate sealed behind it.
Enemy morale shifted instantly. The Aspect Warriors withdrew in disciplined order. The Farseer stepped back from the Inquisitor without delivering a killing blow.
Harlequin elements vanished from sight, apart from one.
Assessment
The Avatar’s withdrawal was unexpected by both Imperial and Aeldari forces. Based on observed behaviour, I suspect external manipulation — likely by the Harlequins, whose non‑engagement and focused observation of the Inquisitor indicate a separate agenda.
Codicier Zael remains in enforced sus‑an state. Prognosis pending.
Kill‑Team Alpha sustained minor injuries. No fatalities.
“Too long have the Children of the Stars wept bitter tears. Today, we unleash our vengeance!”
The Hidden Faces of Khaine’s Shadowed Path.
The Asuryani do not wage war with a single doctrine. Their martial soul is fractured into a thousand facets, each one a reflection of Khaine’s ancient wrath. Where Lore Section II explored the more familiar Aspects, this section turns to the darker, stranger, and more esoteric shrines — warriors who walk paths few dare tread.
Striking Scorpions — The Shadowed Hunters.
Phoenix Lord: Karandras, The Shadow Hunter
Karandras’ epithet, The Shadow Hunter, speaks to a presence felt long before it is seen — a whisper of movement, a breath of cold air, the certainty that something ancient and lethal is watching from the dark.
Warp Spiders — The Whispering Web.
Phoenix Lord: Lhykosidae.
Lhykosidae’s name, The Whispering Web, conjures the image of unseen strands tightening around prey — a trap woven in silence, sprung in an instant, leaving nothing but absence behind.
Phoenix Lord: Drastanta, The Tempest of Starlight
Drastanta’s epithet, The Tempest of Starlight, reflects a warrior who moves like a meteor storm — brilliant, unstoppable, and gone before the echo of impact fades.
Shadow Spectres — The Shade of Twilight
Phoenix Lord: Irillyth, The Shade of Twilight
Irillyth’s title, The Shade of Twilight, embodies the moment between day and night — a liminal space where shapes blur, shadows lengthen, and the boundary between life and death grows thin.
The Harlequins, Children of the Laughing God.
The Harlequins — known in the Aeldari Lexicon as Rillietann — are a wandering, mask‑clad brotherhood who owe allegiance to no craftworld, no kabal, and no Exodite clan. They serve only one master: Cegorach, the Laughing God, the last surviving deity of the ancient Aeldari pantheon. To them, war and art are inseparable; every battle is a performance, every kill a step in a dance older than human civilisation.
They walk the hidden arteries of the Webway, appearing without warning and vanishing just as swiftly. Their acrobatic grace and impossible speed make them seem more like phantoms than warriors, their holo‑suits fracturing their forms into prismatic storms of colour. Even among their own kind they are regarded with awe — and fear — for the Harlequins alone know the secret paths, the forbidden lore, and the true history of the Fall.
They are the keepers of the Black Library, guardians of the Aeldari’s most dangerous knowledge, and the only ones who claim to understand the Laughing God’s inscrutable designs. Their troupes fight in perfect synchronicity, each warrior playing a mythic role: the hero, the villain, the trickster, the shadow. Some roles are so terrible that only a single figure may bear them — the Solitaire, who dances the part of She Who Thirsts herself.
To encounter the Harlequins is to witness a story in motion: dazzling, lethal, and utterly beyond mortal comprehension. They strike without warning, kill without hesitation, and depart without explanation — leaving only riddles, corpses, and the faint echo of laughter in their wake
"Too long have the children of the stars wept bitter tears. Today, we unleash our vengeance!"
Ordo Xenos – Segmentum Tempestus
Primary Report: Incident on Bellerophon
My Lord,
As ordered, I submit my final assessment of the Aeldari incursion on Bellerophon and the subsequent actions of Deathwatch Kill‑Team RHO - Alpha
During the engagement, the Kill‑Team succeeded in driving the xenos forces back toward the Webway aperture. Their discipline and aggression were exemplary, though the Aeldari’s coordination and foresight proved markedly superior to initial projections.
While the Kill‑Team held the line, I advanced to secure evidence of the enemy’s purpose. At this juncture, a sudden burst of light — likely a localised psychic detonation — struck me and forced me to the ground. My vision returned slowly, accompanied by intense cranial pressure consistent with witch‑induced interference.
Upon regaining clarity, I found myself confronted by an Aeldari Farseer. Its spear was levelled at my chest, the point resting against my armour. It did not strike. It waited — studying my expression, searching for fear.
Before I could fire, a scream tore through the chamber.
My probationary — previously assessed as a low‑grade psyker — erupted in uncontrolled psychic flame. The Farseer was immolated instantly, armour and flesh reduced to incandescent ash. The display was far beyond the sanctioned limits of his supposed ability.
As I attempted to comprehend this development, a presence intruded upon my mind. A Harlequin — one of their masked sub‑breeds — bypassed all mental wards with insulting ease. Its whisper was clear:
“Mon‑keigh… this time we stay your doom. Our kin’s design ends here, but only because your path serves a greater tale elsewhere. Do not expect our hand again.”
The presence vanished. The Harlequins withdrew. The remaining Aeldari forces disengaged without further confrontation.
The Webway gate sealed moments later.
Addendum: Disposition of the Probationary
I have transferred the probationary to the Black Ship currently operating within the system, to be processed as part of the tithe for the Golden Throne. As per your standing directive, I have also contacted your embedded agent aboard the vessel. He assures me the individual will not survive transit.
Your assessment was correct: such a volatile loose end cannot be permitted to exist. His uncontrolled awakening, if left unchecked, would risk catastrophic information leakage regarding the Aeldari’s true objective.
I further recommend that the Magos responsible for declaring the probationary “untainted” be repurposed into servitor form. His failure of judgment warrants no lesser corrective measure.
Private Journal Entry — Not for Ordo Record
The Crimson Fist’s note troubles me still.
Cassius found that scrap of vellum in the Ork den — crude glyphs, half‑burned, but the meaning was unmistakable. The creature boasted of ambushing our scout squads, of “krumpin’ the little blue‑armoured humies,” and of following me for “more good fights an’ new dakka.”
The arrogance. The audacity. A feral beast daring to stalk an Inquisitor of the Ordo Xenos.
I will see it ended. No greenskin marks me for sport and lives.
Not one.
The Weight of a Dying Star.
The last echoes of battle faded into the stone; only silence remained. The Deathwatch withdrew to their strike cruiser. The Inquisitor filed his report. The Ork spoor was burned. The Webway gate lay dormant once more.
But for the Aeldari, the cost was not measured in tactical outcomes or territorial gain.
It was measured in souls.
Each fallen Aspect Warrior was a thread cut from a tapestry already frayed to breaking. Each spirit stone shattered was a voice lost forever from the Infinity Circuit. Each death — even the death of the Farseer — was not a statistic, but a wound carved into the memory of a people who have no children to replace the fallen, no time to heal, no future guaranteed.
To the Imperium, the battle on Bellerophon was a minor incident. To the Aeldari, it was another step toward oblivion.
They will not say it aloud. They will not show it. But every warrior slain is a star going dark.
And somewhere, in the hidden arteries of the Webway, a Harlequin laughs — not in joy, but in sorrow. For they alone know how the tale ends. They alone see the last strands of fate tightening. They alone understand that even victories carry the taste of ash.
The Avatar’s retreat was not mercy. It was resignation.
A god of war turning its back on a battle it could have ended with a gesture — because even gods cannot bleed forever.
And so the galaxy turns, indifferent and vast, while the Asuryani walk their narrowing path. Every death a tolling bell. Every battle a reminder. Every loss a prophecy
A species dying not in fire, but in silence.
“We do not fear death for ourselves, mon‑keigh. We fear it for our people, for each loss is a thread torn from a tapestry that can never be rewoven.”


