Just Trying to Survive.
The Beginning - The Warnings.
Across the Imperium, daemonic incursions rarely begin with fire or blood. They start with fractures—small, almost imperceptible wounds in the veil that most dismiss as fatigue, static, or the echo of a half‑remembered nightmare. The Warp does not announce itself. It seeps. It stains. It waits.
In the hours before the breach, reality grows thin. Vox channels distort into half‑heard prayers. Auspex returns flicker with impossible readings. Men grow short‑tempered without knowing why. Lights dim in patterns no engineer can explain. And somewhere, just beyond the edge of perception, something presses against the skin of the world, searching for a way through.
By the time the alarms sound, the incursion is already in motion. The Warp has tasted realspace—and it does not let go.
Astropaths are always the first to suffer. Bound to the Warp through the soul‑binding, they stand closest to the storm, and when the veil thins, it tears through them long before daemons ever manifest.
Whispers twist into screams, fractal echoes that claw at their minds.
Soul‑binding fractures under the pressure, leaving them trembling, blind, or locked in catatonic terror.
Voices not their own spill from their lips—broken warnings, corrupted coordinates, or prayers in languages no human throat should speak.
Choirs fall silent, or worse, begin broadcasting messages that spread fear through every command channel.
An Astropath’s collapse is never dismissed as a coincidence. It is an omen—terrible, unmistakable—that something is pushing against reality from the other side.
“The stars… the stars are screaming again. They know us. They are coming.”
When the Astropaths break, the Imperium knows the breach has begun.
Where Astropaths resist, untrained psykers invite. Their minds lack the discipline, the wards, the iron will needed to withstand the Warp’s pressure. In the early stages of an incursion, they become the weakest points in the psychic membrane—cracks waiting to be forced open.
Emotions spike uncontrollably, amplifying the Warp’s influence with fear, grief, or rage.
Nightmares bleed outward, warping shadows into watching shapes.
Intrusive thoughts become whispers—promises of power or relief that slip into their minds like hooks.
Possession begins subtly, a daemon testing the boundaries of a fragile soul, wearing it like a mask long before anyone realises.
A weak‑willed psyker does not need to summon a daemon. They simply need to falter—lose focus, lose hope, lose themselves. The Warp does the rest.
“He begged for the voices to stop. Something heard him… and answered.”
By the time the first psyker collapses, the breach is no longer theoretical. It is happening.
The breaking of the Astropaths and the corruption of the untrained psykers form the earliest, darkest signs of a daemonic incursion. They are the warning bells that ring before the world tears open. They show that the danger is not approaching.
It is already here.
This journal was recovered from the sealed evidence vaults of Lord Inquisitor Threx Valgar, Ordo Malleus. Its presence among his private records is unexplained. No accompanying report, no classification sigils, and no surviving annotations were found alongside it.
The manuscript itself bears signs of exposure to extreme psychic resonance. Several pages are warped, ink distorted as though dragged by unseen currents. Portions of the parchment register faint Warp‑echoes even after multiple sanctification rites.
The identity of the writer remains unconfirmed. Cross‑reference attempts with Imperial personnel archives have yielded no match. What is known is this:
The final entries coincide precisely with the first recorded anomalies of the Versaddon Primus Incursion—an event sealed under Inquisitorial authority and purged from most Imperial records.
Proceed with caution. The words within may be the last testament of a soul who witnessed the veil tear from the inside.
— Archivist‑Primus Helian Mors, Ordo Malleus Sub‑Archive, Titan
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
The Journal - Entry One.
I do not know why I am writing this. Habit, perhaps. Or fear. Mostly fear, if I am honest with myself.
The order to mobilise came before dawn. No explanation. No enemy sighted. No alarms, no sirens, no vox‑broadcasts from High Command. Just a curt summons delivered by a runner who looked as confused as I felt. “Full readiness. Immediate deployment. No exceptions.” That was all.
The men did not question it. Veterans rarely do. They simply rose, wordless and efficient, checking weapons and armour with the grim calm of men who have survived too much to be surprised by anything. I wish I shared their certainty. Emperor, help me, I barely feel like I belong among them. A captain in rank, yes—but still a stranger in their eyes, and a child in my own.
Something is wrong. I can feel it in the way the air hangs heavy, as if the world itself is holding its breath. The vox-net crackles with static, even on secured channels. Auspex teams report “anomalous readings,” though none can explain what that means. The Astropathic Choir has been sealed off entirely. No word on why.
The men whisper when they think I cannot hear. They say the night felt too long. They say the shadows moved. They say the stars looked… different.
I dismissed it as nerves. I had to. A captain cannot indulge superstition. But even as I write this, I cannot shake the feeling that we are marching toward something unseen—something vast and terrible that has already begun to unfold around us.
I pray I am wrong. I fear I am not.
The Journal - Entry Two.
The situation has worsened, though no one can explain how or why. There is still no enemy. No contact. No sightings. Yet the regiment feels as if it is coming apart at the seams.
It began with arguments—small things at first. A trooper snapping at a comrade over a misplaced charge pack. A sergeant slamming a man against a wall for speaking out of turn. I thought it was nerves, the strain of sudden mobilisation. But it has grown… sharper. Hotter. Like something is stoking the anger inside them.
Today, two veterans—men who have fought side by side for years—came to blows so violently that it took six others to drag them apart. One of them kept screaming that he “heard the beating of war-drums” and that the other man was “drowning them out.” He has no memory of saying it now. He sits in the infirmary, shaking, unable to meet my eyes.
I tried to restore order, but the men look at me with a mixture of pity and contempt. They can smell my uncertainty. Emperor, forgive me, I can barely keep my voice steady when I address them. I was never meant for this. Not command. Not leadership. And certainly not whatever this is.
There is a heat in the air, a tension that feels like the moment before a lasgun’s power pack overloads. Tempers flare without warning. Fists clench. Teeth grind. Even I feel it—an itch beneath the skin, a pressure behind the eyes, a pulse that is not my own.
Something is driving the men toward violence. Something unseen. Something hungry.
If this is merely the beginning, I fear what the end will look like.
I must remain in control. I must. But every hour, it becomes harder to tell whether the rage I see in the others is spreading… or waking in me as well.
The Daemons of Khorne.
Among the daemonic hosts of the Warp, none embody unrestrained violence more completely than the legions of Khorne. Where the veil weakens, their presence is often heralded not by spectral manifestations or sorcerous signs, but by a rising tide of fury within mortal minds. This is the first symptom of their approach: rage without cause, hatred without target, bloodlust without reason.
The lesser foot soldiers of the Blood God—known to the Ordo Malleus as Bloodletters—are creatures forged from murder itself. They are the distilled essence of slaughter, their forms coalescing from the psychic resonance of anger, conflict, and spilt blood. When they manifest, it is because the world has already begun to tear itself apart.
Flesh Hounds, the hunting beasts of Khorne, follow soon after. Drawn to the scent of fear and the heat of violence, they slip through the cracks in reality like predators tracking wounded prey. Their arrival is rarely seen at first—only felt, as a sudden tightening in the chest, a prickle at the back of the neck, or the sense of being pursued by something that should not exist.
Above them all looms the shadow of the Bloodthirster, a greater daemon whose presence alone can ignite entire regiments into uncontrollable frenzy. Should such a being force its way into realspace, the battle is often lost before it begins. The world becomes an altar, and every heartbeat a sacrifice.
Thus, when unexplained violence erupts among Imperial forces—when discipline fractures and men turn on one another with murderous intent—the Ordo Malleus recognises the pattern. It is not a coincidence. It is not disorder. It is the first drumbeat of Khorne’s advance.
The Journal - Entry Three.
I no longer know what is real.
The sky bled today.
At first it was only a discolouration—clouds turning a deep, bruised red as if the sun had died behind them. Then the first droplets fell. Thick. Warm. Not rain. Not water. The men stared upward in silence as it pattered against their armour, streaking the ground in dark, rust‑coloured trails. Some fell to their knees. Others began shouting prayers. A few simply laughed, high and broken.
Before we could regain order, the symbols appeared.
They burned themselves into the walls of the hab-blocks and armoury structures—jagged, looping marks that no mortal hand could have carved so quickly. They pulsed faintly, as if alive, as if listening. Every time I looked away, I could swear they shifted, rearranging themselves into new patterns I could not bear to decipher.
Then the screaming started.
Not from my men. From the civilians. From the workers. From the ones we had been told to keep calm and contained. They came pouring out of the lower districts in a tide of bodies—twisted, frenzied, their skin marked with the same symbols that scarred the buildings. Some bore crude weapons. Others used their bare hands. All of them moved with a single, terrible purpose.
My veterans opened fire, but even they hesitated when they saw what was mixed among the mob.
Shapes.
Not human. Not entirely. Flickering forms that seemed to blur at the edges, as if reality could not decide whether they belonged here. Eyes like burning coals. Limbs too long. Movements too fast. They darted between the cultists, driving them forward, herding them like beasts toward our lines.
I tried to give orders. The Emperor knows I tried. But my voice cracked, drowned out by the roar of the mob and the pounding in my own skull. The men looked to me for direction, and I had none to give. I could barely hold my laspistol steady. My hands would not stop shaking.
This is no riot. No uprising. No rebellion.
Something has come through.
Something is leading them.
And whatever it is… it wants blood.
I fear we are already too late.
The Journal - Entry Four.
For a moment—just a moment—I thought I had found my strength.
The cultists were closing in from three streets at once, their chanting rising above the storm of blood falling from the sky. My men were faltering, some stepping back, others shouting over one another. I could feel the panic spreading like fire through dry grass. And something inside me snapped—not in fear, but in defiance.
I shouted for the line to hold. I ordered the heavy teams to set their fields of fire. I even stepped forward myself, laspistol raised, trying to show the men that I was not afraid. For a heartbeat, they believed me. Emperor help me, I believed me.
It felt like steel. Like resolve. Like the kind of courage a captain is supposed to have.
But it wasn’t real.
It shattered the moment the shapes emerged from the smoke.
They moved differently from the cultists—too fast, too deliberate, as if the world bent around them. Their outlines flickered, refusing to settle into anything my mind could accept. One moment they seemed tall and blade‑thin, the next hunched and predatory. The air around them rippled with heat, as though every breath they took scorched the ground.
The men nearest them froze. Not in discipline. In terror.
I tried to give another order, but the words died in my throat. The false courage I had clung to evaporated, leaving only the truth: I am not ready for this. I am not the leader they need. I am barely holding myself together.
One of the veterans—Sergeant Halvek—grabbed my shoulder and pulled me back behind the barricade. “With respect, sir,” he said, “those things aren’t meant for us.” His voice was steady, but his eyes… his eyes were the eyes of a man who had seen something he could not explain.
The shapes advanced, silent and purposeful, weaving through the cultists like wolves among cattle. Every instinct screamed at me to run. To hide. To close my eyes and pretend none of this was happening.
Whatever I thought I had found within myself—it was an illusion. A thin shell that cracked the moment the real enemy stepped into view. If these are only the first to appear… what follows them will break us all.
The Ordo Malleus and the Grey Knights.
When daemonic manifestations breach the veil, the Imperium does not rely on hope, prayer, or the courage of mortal soldiers. It turns instead to the Ordo Malleus—the hidden arm of the Inquisition charged with the detection, containment, and eradication of Warp entities. Their agents walk unseen among Imperial worlds, hunting the signs of corruption long before others recognise the pattern. To them, unexplained violence, psychic collapse, and symbols of bloodshed are not mysteries. They are warnings.
But even the Ordo Malleus has limits. When the breach widens beyond mortal capacity—when daemons stride openly and reality begins to tear—they call upon their ultimate sanction.
The Grey Knights.
Forged in secrecy and bound to Titan, the Grey Knights are the Imperium’s final answer to the Warp. Each warrior is a psyker of exceptional strength, their souls tempered through ritual, discipline, and unyielding purity. They are not merely resistant to corruption—they are immune to it. Their very existence is a weapon against the daemonic.
Where they walk, the Warp recoils. Where they strike, daemons are unmade. Their armour bears wards and sigils that burn with psychic fire. Their blades are inscribed with the names of banished horrors. Their minds are fortresses, unassailable even by the greatest of the Warp’s predators.
Yet their arrival is never a sign of hope. It is a sign that the world they step upon is already lost. The Grey Knights are not sent to save planets. They are sent to cleanse them.
And when the Ordo Malleus invokes their name, it means only one thing: the breach has grown too wide, the bloodshed too great, and the daemonic presence too powerful for any mortal force to withstand.
Where the servants of Khorne spill blood, the Grey Knights follow the trail—not to rescue the living, but to ensure the dead do not rise screaming in the Warp’s embrace.
The Journal - Entry Five.
I thought I had reached the limit of my fear. I was wrong.
The cultists came again at dusk, more numerous than before, their howls echoing through the blood‑choked streets. The shapes—those flickering, impossible things—moved among them with growing clarity. Their outlines sharpened. Their blades gleamed wetly in the crimson light. Every instinct screamed that these were not enemies a man could fight. Not truly.
My men were exhausted. Terrified. Some barely able to hold their rifles steady. I could feel their eyes on me, waiting for orders I no longer knew how to give. The dread pressed down on us like a physical weight, thick and suffocating. Even breathing felt like a struggle.
Then the air changed.
It was subtle at first—a pressure, a hum, a coldness that cut through the heat of the battlefield. The daemons faltered. The cultists hesitated mid‑charge, their frenzied screams choking into confusion. Even the symbols burning on the walls seemed to dim, as if recoiling from something unseen.
And then I saw them.
Figures of silver, striding through the smoke as though it parted for them. Their armour shone even beneath the bleeding sky, etched with runes that glowed like embers. They moved with purpose, with certainty, with a calm that defied the madness around us. Each step radiated a presence that pushed back the dread clawing at my mind.
For the first time since this nightmare began, I felt something I had almost forgotten.
Hope.
The daemons recoiled from them. The cultists broke ranks, screaming in terror. The silver warriors raised their blades—massive, inscribed weapons that hummed with power—and advanced without hesitation.
I do not know who they are. I do not know where they came from. But the moment I saw them, I understood one thing with absolute certainty:
These are not ordinary soldiers.
These are the Emperor’s answer to the darkness.
And for the first time, I believe we might survive the night.
The Journal - Entry Six.
I thought the silver warriors were our salvation. I thought their arrival meant the tide had turned. I was wrong again.
The ground shook before the enemy even appeared. A deep, rhythmic pounding—like the heartbeat of something colossal buried beneath the earth. The air grew hotter with every pulse, thick with the smell of iron and smoke. My men clutched their weapons, eyes wide, waiting for something none of us could name.
Then the sky tore open.
A rift of fire split the clouds, spilling crimson light across the ruins. The cultists fell to their knees, screaming praises. The daemons—those blade‑thin horrors—threw back their heads in exultation. And from the breach stepped something so vast, so hateful, that my mind recoiled before I could fully comprehend it.
A shadow of horns and wings. A silhouette wreathed in flame. A presence that pressed against my thoughts like a fist, crushing every scrap of courage I had left.
The Bloodthirster.
I did not know its name then, but I felt its purpose. It radiated slaughter. It was slaughter. My legs buckled. I could not breathe. I could not think. The hope I had clung to only moments before shattered like glass.
But the silver warriors did not falter.
They advanced as one, their armour blazing with runes that flared brighter in the daemon’s presence. The air around them shimmered with psychic force, pushing back the heat, the dread, the crushing weight of the creature’s will. One stepped ahead of the others—a giant even among giants—his halberd raised, its blade burning with pale fire.
The Bloodthirster roared, a sound that shook the teeth in my skull. The Knight did not flinch.
They met in a storm of light and shadow.
I saw only fragments—flashes of silver, arcs of fire, the shockwaves of their blows tearing chunks from the ground. Every strike from the daemon felt like it would split the world. Every counter from the Knight rang like a cathedral bell, pure and defiant.
My men watched in silence. Some wept. Some prayed. I simply stared, unable to look away.
This was not a battle. It was a clash of gods.
And in that moment, I understood the truth the Grey Knights carry with them:
They do not come to save us.
They come to stop what cannot be allowed to live.
Whether we survive their war is… irrelevant.
Emperor preserve us. I do not know if we will see another dawn.
Exterminatus and the Silence it Enforces.
When a world falls to the Warp, the Imperium does not bargain. It does not negotiate. It does not attempt rescue once the taint has taken root. It invokes the last and most terrible decree in its arsenal: Exterminatus.
This sanction is not a punishment. It is a quarantine. A severing. A necessary amputation to prevent the infection from spreading to the wider body of the Imperium. Worlds subjected to Exterminatus are scoured of all life—burned, drowned, shattered, or rendered uninhabitable by weapons whose names are spoken only in the darkest chambers of the Inquisition.
To the Ordo Malleus, Exterminatus is not an act of cruelty. It is an act of mercy. A mercy for the Imperium, not for the world condemned.
For when daemons walk openly, when the veil is torn and the servants of the Blood God stride through fire and slaughter, there can be no recovery. No redemption. Only cleansing flame.
Yet there is a truth darker still, known only to those who serve the Hammer in the shadows.
The Grey Knights must never be seen.
Their existence is a secret guarded more fiercely than any weapon, any relic, any vault upon Titan. They are the Emperor’s final bulwark against the Warp, and the knowledge of their nature is deemed too dangerous for mortal minds to bear. To witness them in battle is to witness the impossible—to see the Warp confronted not with fear, but with mastery.
Thus, the Ordo Malleus enforces a silence as absolute as death. Civilians who glimpse the Knights are executed. Guardsmen who fight beside them are purged or mind‑wiped. Even the crews of their own strike cruisers undergo memory‑scouring after each deployment, their recollections stripped clean to preserve the purity of the secret.
Only the Inquisitors of the Ordo Malleus retain full knowledge of the Knights’ deeds, and even they speak of such matters only in sealed chambers, beneath wards older than most worlds.
Where the Grey Knights walk, the truth dies with them.
And when Exterminatus follows in their wake, it is not to erase the daemons they have banished—but to erase the witnesses who saw them do it.
Final Report: Ordo Malleus After‑Action Summary
Filed by Inquisitor Draxen Kyth, Ordo Malleus
Access Level: Omega‑Black. Unauthorised viewing is punishable by immediate termination.
I. Summary of Events
A Warp breach manifested within the lower districts of Versaddon Primus, preceded by psychic instability, mass hysteria, and spontaneous outbreaks of violence among Imperial Guard personnel. The breach escalated rapidly, culminating in the full manifestation of a Bloodthirster and attendant daemonic host.
Strike Force Valiant of the Grey Knights was deployed via teleportation insertion. Engagement with the greater daemon commenced immediately upon arrival. The Bloodthirster was banished after sustained psychic and physical combat. All lesser daemons were eradicated or dispersed.
The breach was sealed. The taint was not.
II. Containment Measures
Following standard Ordo Malleus protocol for daemonic exposure:
All surviving members of the planetary government, including the Governor’s staff and administrative personnel, were executed for potential Warp contamination and knowledge of the Grey Knights’ presence.
All surviving Imperial Guard forces were terminated. No exceptions. Exposure to daemonic entities and observation of Grey Knights renders them liabilities to Imperial security.
All civilian survivors were purged. The risk of psychic infection, memetic corruption, or latent possession was deemed unacceptable.
The Grey Knights’ strike cruiser Sanctis Aegis initiated memory‑purge protocols on its own crew following extraction, in accordance with Titan‑mandated secrecy procedures.
III. Exterminatus Decree
Given the scale of the breach, the depth of corruption, and the impossibility of guaranteeing long‑term containment, Exterminatus was authorised and executed.
A cyclonic torpedo barrage rendered Versaddon Primus lifeless within minutes. Atmospheric ignition and tectonic destabilisation ensured no biological or Warp‑tainted remnants survived.
The world is now classified as Perdita. No future colonisation is permitted.
IV. Final Notes
A personal journal was recovered from the ruins—authorship identified as Captain Kaldant, 122nd Versaddon Line Infantry. Its contents provide a valuable psychological record of early-stage daemonic influence on unshielded minds. The document has been archived under sealed Ordo Malleus record for study and reference.
All other evidence has been destroyed.
“Where daemons walk, silence must follow.” — Inquisitor Draxen Kyth, Ordo Malleus
Epilogue: What Remains in the Ashes
The recovered journal of Captain Kaldant stands as the only surviving testament to the final hours of Versaddon Primus. Through his words, the descent from confusion to terror becomes clear: the subtle psychic tremors, the rising tide of rage, the cultist hordes, and the daemonic host that followed. His final entries capture the moment hope flickered — the arrival of the Grey Knights — only to be swallowed by the far greater truth that their presence heralds not salvation, but final judgement.
The interluding records of the Ordo Malleus confirm what Kaldant could not know: the incursion was already beyond mortal containment. The Bloodthirster’s manifestation sealed the world’s fate long before the first shot was fired. The Grey Knights fought not to save Versaddon Primus, but to prevent the breach from spreading.
Inquisitor Draxen Kyth’s final report closes the circle. The executions, the purges, the memory‑scouring, and ultimately the Exterminatus decree were not acts of cruelty, but of doctrine — the cold arithmetic of a galaxy at war with the Warp. No witnesses. No survivors. No risk.
Only silence.
And so the world burns, its history reduced to ash and sealed archives. Captain Kaldant’s journal remains locked within the vaults of the Ordo Malleus, a fragile echo of a man who tried to stand against the impossible, found a moment of courage, and was swallowed by forces far beyond his understanding.
In the end, his words endure where he could not — a reminder that in the grim darkness of the far future, even the bravest voices are often heard only after the fire has fallen.
File sealed under Ordo Malleus authority. Access forbidden.









