Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Lore Post - Bane of the Xenos post 3 of 3

 


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


Dire Avengers — The Unyielding Storm.
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


Dark Reapers — The Harbingers of Finality.
Phoenix Lord: Maugan Ra, The Harvester of Souls

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.


Eagle Pilots — The Silent Watchers of the Upper Sky.
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


Crimson Hunters — The Blooded Talons of Vengeance.
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.


Fire Dragons — The Burning Wrath of the Forge.
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


Howling Banshees — The Storm of Silence.
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 

The Striking Scorpions are the predators of the Warrior Path — silent, patient, and merciless. They stalk the battlefield from beneath the earth or within the darkest corners of ruined cities, emerging only when the moment to kill is absolute. Their shrine teaches ambush, infiltration, and the art of the sudden, overwhelming strike.

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.

The Whispering Web The Warp Spiders are the most unsettling of all Aspect Warriors. They flicker in and out of reality, their jump generators tearing momentary holes in the fabric of the Warp. Their shrine teaches unpredictability, terror tactics, and the art of striking from impossible angles.

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.


Shining Spears — The Tempest of Starlight.
Phoenix Lord: Drastanta, The Tempest of Starlight

.The Shining Spears are the knights of the Craftworlds — swift, honour‑bound, and devastating in their charges. Mounted upon jetbikes that blaze like comets, they strike with lances of pure energy, shattering enemy lines in a single, perfect thrust.

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

 The Shadow Spectres are phantoms — spectral warriors who drift across the battlefield like living ghosts. Their prism rifles refract light into lethal beams, and their armour shimmers with the colours of dusk. Their shrine teaches misdirection, fear, and the art of dissolving into the half‑light between worlds.

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!"


Final Inquisitorial Report
Ordo Xenos – Segmentum Tempestus 
Filed by: Tutor‑Inquisitor Macharius 
To: Lord‑Inquisitor [REDACTED] Clearance: Omega‑Black
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. 

I began to bring my digital weapon to bear.

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.”

-Until the next hunt-



Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Lore Post - Bane of the Xenos part 2 of 3

 


Bane of the Xenos.


The Fall of an Empire.

The Aeldari Empire

Before Humanity learned to shape fire, the Aeldari had already shaped the stars. Their empire was a masterpiece of psychic brilliance and living artifice — a civilisation so advanced that its works blurred the line between technology and sorcery. They traversed the Webway as easily as others walk a garden path, their worlds radiant with culture, philosophy, and effortless mastery.

For millions of years, they reigned unchallenged. Not through conquest, but through sheer superiority of mind and spirit.

Descent into Decadence.

But supremacy bred stagnation, and stagnation curdled into excess. As the millennia rolled on, the Aeldari turned inward. Purpose gave way to indulgence. Entire star systems became theatres of sensation, their psychic excesses echoing through the Warp like a rising, discordant hymn.

The warnings of the Craftworld seers went unheeded. The Exodites fled to distant, harsher worlds. The Webway grew restless with unspoken dread.

Yet the core of the empire spiralled deeper, blind to the storm they were summoning.

The Fall of the Aeldari.

At last, the crescendo broke.

The collective depravity of trillions tore a wound in reality itself. In a single, apocalyptic moment, the heart of the Aeldari civilisation was annihilated. Worlds were stripped to ash. Souls were devoured before their bodies hit the ground. The psychic shockwave rippled across the galaxy, extinguishing an empire in a heartbeat.

Where once stood the greatest civilisation the galaxy had ever known, there remained only silence… and a screaming void.

The Birth of Slaanesh & the Eye of Terror.

From that void, a new god awakened.

Slaanesh, the Dark Prince, the Devourer of Souls — born from the Aeldari’s own excess. Their psychic scream became its first breath. Their deaths became its first feast. The shockwave tore open a permanent rift in the fabric of the Materium: the Eye of Terror, a yawning, Warp‑saturated scar that still bleeds madness into the galaxy.

The Aeldari survived — but only as fragments. Craftworlders, Exodites, Corsairs, Harlequins. A shattered people haunted by the god they created.

And so the Aeldari walk the long, narrow Path, forever fleeing the thirst of the one who waits for their final, inevitable fall.

Keep me from death. Keep me from the chill of the void. Keep my soul from She Who Thirsts

Filed by: Inquisitor‑[Name Redacted], Ordo Xenos Vessel: Corvus Blackstar “Vigil’s Talon”  Approach Vector: Night‑side, low‑orbit penetration through nebular cover

The nebula’s particulate veil provided ideal concealment during descent. Ionised dust scattered our auspex signature and clung to the Blackstar’s hull in shimmering coils, masking our approach from what little planetary surveillance remains functional. Not that it would have mattered. The local defence force demonstrates no meaningful command structure, no discipline, and no control over their own populace.

Two riots were observed from orbit. No response. No authority. No hope of recovery.

The Governor’s execution by the Astartes was swift and justified. A single bolt round was delivered at the spaceport upon touchdown. Brutal, efficient, and entirely appropriate. The man had surrendered the world to anarchy long before our arrival; his removal was a necessary excision of rot.

As the Blackstar banked toward the night side, I traced the sigil of my rosette with my thumb — a grounding gesture I refuse to acknowledge, yet one that steadies me when the weight of duty presses close. The cold metal reminded me of the oath I carry, even as disgust for this world’s failures gnawed at the edges of my thoughts.

For all my contempt, I cannot deny a measure of respect for the Deathwatch’s operational clarity. Their plan is direct, uncompromising, and — if executed with their usual precision — likely to succeed.

No Ork spoor detected. No spoor of any kind. Which is, in itself, a concern.

The absence of evidence remains the most troubling evidence of all.

+++ End of Operational Record +++ Seal of the Ordo Xenos authenticated. Inquisitor‑[Name Redacted] assumes full responsibility for the contents herein. Let this stand as a testament to duty, burden, and consequence.


The Phoenix Lords: Embers of a Dying Empire.

In the long shadow cast by the Fall, when the Aeldari reeled from the birth‑cry of Slaanesh and the ruin of their empire, a single figure rose from the ashes of their shattered civilisation. Asurmen, first of the Phoenix Lords, became a beacon in an age of despair — a warrior‑sage who refused to let his people fade into oblivion.

Clad in the armour that would one day bear his name, Asurmen gathered the survivors and taught them a new way of war: a path of discipline, focus, and spiritual restraint. From his teachings came the first disciples, each destined to become a Phoenix Lord in their own right — immortal exemplars who carry their wisdom and skill from host to host across the millennia.

Where the Aeldari once fought with fluid grace and boundless psychic might, the Phoenix Lords forged a new doctrine: the Path of the Warrior. It was not merely a method of battle, but a safeguard against the excesses that had doomed their civilisation. Through ritual, meditation, and absolute dedication, the warrior’s spirit could be honed without succumbing to the temptations that once consumed their race.

From these teachings emerged the Aspect Shrines — sanctuaries of martial philosophy scattered across the Craftworlds. Each shrine embodies a single facet of Khaine’s war‑spirit: precision, fury, patience, destruction, or swiftness. Within their walls, Aeldari warriors don the masks of their chosen Aspect and surrender themselves to its discipline, becoming living reflections of the god of war.

Though countless shrines exist, each unique in form and doctrine, all trace their lineage back to Asurmen’s first teachings — a legacy of survival carved from the ruins of a fallen empire.

Recorded by: Kill‑Team Watch‑Helm Auspex Suite Timestamp: T‑12 minutes to surface engagement Participants: Execrator‑Leandros (Alpha), Brother‑Codicier Zael, Inquisitor Macharius (Ordo Xenos)

[Vox‑link opens. Background: Corvus Blackstar engines, low rumble.]

Alpha: Kill‑Team, maintain auspex sweep. Night‑side approach vector confirmed. No movement on the ridge.

Codicier : I feel them. The Eldar. Their minds burn like stars behind a veil. One of them… brighter than the rest. Focused. Cold. That will be the Farseer.

Alpha: Range?

Codicier : Close. Closer than I expected. His presence presses against the edge of thought. Calculating us. Measuring us.

[Pause. Static crackles.]

Codicier : But there is… something else.

Alpha: Clarify.

Codicier : A presence beneath the Farseer’s light. Older. Hotter. Like molten iron beneath a calm surface. Rage given shape. It feels— …no… that cannot be…

Alpha: Zael. Report.

Codicier : It’s— Emperor preserve us. It’s the Avatar. It is here.

[Silence. Engines hum. Armour plates shift as the kill‑team brace.]

Alpha: Auspex shows trace Ork spores in the lower valley. Minimal. No movement. No heat signatures.

Codicier : Strange. The spores are old. Faint. As if something burned them away—

Inquisitor Macharius: Enough. You will cease speculation. Orks are irrelevant until I say otherwise.

Alpha: Inquisitor, the presence of spores suggests—

Macharius: You will not lecture me on xenos taxonomy, Execrator/Chaplain. Weapons do not require knowledge of my inner thoughts. You will act when ordered.

[Brief static. Codicier Zael lowers his voice.]

Codicier : (quietly) He reacts strongly to the Avatar’s presence. More than he should.

Alpha: Noted. Maintain focus. We proceed as planned.

[Vox‑link ends.]

 Inquisitorial Addendum

+++ INQUISITORIAL ANNOTATION: LEVEL SIGMA‑BLACK +++

The preceding transcript is to be removed from the official mission archive. Psychic impressions recorded by the Librarian are irrelevant to the strategic outcome and risk misinterpretation by unqualified personnel.

This matter is closed. Further discussion is unnecessary.

— Inquisitor Macharius, Ordo Xenos

Inter‑Squad Vox Exchange — Internal Channel Only.

Encrypted. Not for Inquisitorial review.

Participants:

  • Execrator‑Leandros

  • Codicier -Zael

  • (Background: Corvus Blackstar, night‑side descent)

[Vox‑link opens. Low engine hum.]

Alpha: Your earlier hesitation. Explain it.

Codicier: It was not the Avatar alone. Its rage is immense, yes — but something within the Blackstar resonated with it. A mind echoing the same molten fury.

Alpha: One of ours?

Codicier: No. Him. The Inquisitor.

[Static. Armour shifts.]

Alpha: State your meaning.

Codicier: The Avatar’s psychic wrath brushed against his thoughts and found… kinship. A wound. A memory. Something buried so deep it bleeds only under extreme pressure. Not corruption — but instability.

Alpha: Noted. Anything further?

Codicier: Yes. The probationary. The young one. When the Avatar’s presence surged, he reacted. Not physically — psychically. A ripple through his mind like a spark catching dry tinder.

Alpha: You believe he is—

Codicier: —latent. Untrained. A psyker who does not yet know what he is. The Avatar’s aura brushed him, and he felt it. He should not have felt anything at all.

Alpha: Does the Inquisitor know?

Codicier: No. And given his… state, he must not. Not until we understand more.

Alpha: Understood. Maintain silence. We proceed.

[Vox‑link ends.]

Farseer, Exarch, and Avatar — The Triad of Aeldari War.

The Farseer — Master of the Skeins of Fate

Among the Asuryani, none stand closer to the edge of spiritual annihilation than the Farseer. Once a Warlock, now lost forever upon the Path of the Seer, a Farseer’s mind roams the tangled futures of their people, shaping events with cold precision. Their consciousness is a blade honed on possibility — divining, guiding, and manipulating the strands of fate to preserve what remains of the Aeldari race. Their power is vast, their detachment absolute, and their burden unending. 

The Exarch — The Eternal Warrior

Where the Farseer is clarity, the Exarch is fury contained. An Exarch is an Aeldari who has become lost upon the Path of the Warrior, unable to remove the war‑mask that once protected their mind. They become a living embodiment of their Aspect — a teacher, a guardian, and a vessel for countless warrior souls bound within their ancient armour. To their kin, they are both revered and feared: a reminder of the price of war, and the necessity of those willing to pay it. 

The Avatar — The Bloody‑Handed God Incarnate

At the heart of every craftworld lies a slumbering god: the Avatar of Khaine, a shard of the ancient war deity bound in wraithbone and ritual. When the Aeldari face annihilation, the Exarchs enact the Rite of the Young King, sacrificing one of their own to awaken the Avatar. What emerges is not merely a warrior, but a fragment of divine wrath — molten, unstoppable, and driven by the collective rage of an entire craftworld. The Avatar is the Aeldari war‑soul made manifest, a god of murder walking once more. 

Recorded by: Kill‑Team Watch‑Helm Auspex Suite Timestamp: T‑3 minutes to surface contact Participants: Inquisitor Macharius, Execrator-Chaplain Leandros (Alpha), Codicier-brother Zael, Brother Cassius

[Vox‑link opens. Wind shear across the Blackstar’s hull.]

Macharius: Cassius. Break from formation. Sweep the lower valley. Confirm the Ork traces.

Cassius: Acknowledged, Inquisitor. Adjusting course.

Alpha: Negative. We hold formation. The spores are residual. No threat profile. Our priority is the Eldar—

Macharius: You will obey. The Orks are my concern. Not yours.

Alpha: Inquisitor, diverting a Marine weakens our—

Alpha: Inquisitor, diverting a Marine weakens our—

Macharius: Do not presume to question me, Execrator‑Chaplain You are a weapon. You will strike where I aim you. Cassius, proceed.

Cassius: …Aye. Executing vector shift.

[Static. Armour plates shift as Alpha turns.]

Alpha: (to Codicier, low) His anger spikes again.

Codicier : I feel it. Like a furnace beneath the skin. The Avatar’s presence is stirring something inside him.

Alpha: We cannot—

[A soft chime. Auspex distortion.]

Codicier: Contact. Multiple signatures. Close. Very close.

Alpha: Eldar?

Codicier : Not Craftworlders. Their minds are… masked. Dancing. Laughing. Harlequins.

[A ripple of vox‑static, like distant laughter.]

Macharius: All units— weapons ready. They come.

[Vox‑link ends.]

Aspect Shrines of the Aeldari — A Brief Compendium.

Dire Avengers — Shrine of the Noble Blade

The Dire Avengers embody Khaine’s aspect as the noble warrior: disciplined, unyielding, and merciless when duty demands. Their shrines teach mastery of the Avenger Shuriken Catapult and the art of reading the ebb and flow of battle, striking with perfect timing. They are the most numerous of the Aspects, the backbone of many Craftworld hosts, and the first to answer a Farseer’s call.

Howling Banshees — Shrine of the Storm of Silence

The Banshees are swift, acrobatic killers whose keening masks unleash psychic shockwaves that paralyse their foes. Their shrines honour the daughters of Morai‑Heg, and their warriors move with a dancer’s grace and a predator’s precision. Led by the teachings of Jain Zar, they strike like a sudden scream in the dark — fast, lethal, and unstoppable.

Striking Scorpions — Shrine of the Shadow Hunter

The Scorpions are the silent executioners of the Craftworlds, stalking through shadow and ruin before erupting into brutal close‑quarters combat. Their shrines teach patience, stealth, and the merciless efficiency of the Mandiblaster’s sting. Under Karandras’ legacy, they temper savagery with discipline, becoming the hidden wrath of Khaine.

Fire Dragons — Shrine of the Burning Lance

The Fire Dragons are the embodiment of destructive purity. Their shrines teach mastery of fusion weapons and the art of reducing armour, fortification, and flesh to molten ruin. Fuegan’s disciples stride into the heart of battle with unwavering purpose, their fiery armour reflecting the inferno they unleash upon their enemies.

Dark Reapers — Shrine of the Harvester of Souls

The Reapers are the long‑range executioners of the Aeldari, echoing Khaine’s aspect as the Destroyer. Their shrines teach absolute precision, patience, and the cold detachment of death delivered from afar. Clad in midnight armour and bearing the Reaper Launcher, they are the storm that falls upon the foe without mercy or haste.

Warp Spiders — Shrine of the Whispering Web

The Warp Spiders are the most uncanny of the Aspects, leaping through the Immaterium with their jump generators to strike from impossible angles. Their shrines honour the crystalline predators that guard the Infinity Circuit, teaching warriors to embrace risk, unpredictability, and the razor‑wire lethality of the Death Spinner. They are defenders who fight on the knife‑edge between reality and the Warp.

In the end, these shrines are more than disciplines of war — they are the fractured reflections of a civilisation that refused to die, each guided by a Phoenix Lord whose legend burns across millennia. Their echoes will matter in the battles to come, for the paths of the Aspect Warriors intertwine with the fate of the kill‑team now descending into the dark. In the next post, we will delve deeper into these shrines and the immortal champions who shaped them, even as we follow the final, brutal moments of the Deathwatch’s tale — where prophecy, rage, and duty collide, and not all will walk away.




Monday, March 16, 2026

Lore Post - The Bane of the Xenos 1 of 3

 


The Bane of the Xenos.

The Long Vigil Begins.

Across the Imperium’s fractured frontiers, where alien empires gnaw at the borders of mankind’s dominion, the Ordo Xenos stands as the first and final bulwark. They are the hidden hunters of the Inquisition — the watchers in the void who study the unknowable, stalk the unclean, and sanction the extinction of those species that threaten Humanity’s divine ascendancy.

Yet knowledge alone cannot halt the xenos tide.

For the most perilous missions — those requiring precision, purity of purpose, and the unflinching resolve of the Emperor’s finest — the Ordo Xenos calls upon its most lethal instrument: the Deathwatch. Drawn from hundreds of Chapters, sworn to a single purpose, these black‑armoured Astartes prosecute the alien with a zeal sharpened by sacrifice. Each warrior is a living chronicle of war, each kill‑team a scalpel poised to excise the Imperium’s most insidious foes.

This is their vigil. This is their war. And in the darkness between the stars, the Deathwatch endures.

Home of the Watch.

A Watch Fortress is the primary operational hub of the Deathwatch, serving simultaneously as a command centre, garrison, armoury, archive, and training installation for kill‑teams operating within a given region of the galaxy. These fortresses vary widely in form — some are deep‑space void stations or star forts, while others are fortified planetary keeps, subterranean complexes, or hollowed asteroids equipped with cloaking systems. Each is commanded by a Watch Commander, usually holding the rank of Watch Master, who exercises absolute authority over all kill‑teams stationed there.

Watch Fortresses maintain extensive support staff, including Techmarines, Apothecaries, Chapter‑serf equivalents, Inquisitorial specialists, and large numbers of mono‑task servitors. Astropaths are permanently assigned, with at least one sealed within an armoured “saviour‑chamber” to ensure that critical astrotelepathic messages can be transmitted even if the fortress is overrun.

Despite the relatively small number of Astartes present at any one time, Watch Fortresses are heavily armed and extremely difficult to assault. Many are equipped with autonomous weapon systems, stasis‑vaults containing forbidden texts or alien artefacts, and stockpiles of rare or devastating weaponry, including cyclonic torpedoes.

Selection for the Watch.

Deathwatch kill‑teams are composed of veteran Space Marines seconded from Chapters across the Imperium. Selection is based on demonstrated experience and effectiveness against xenos threats rather than seniority alone. While exceptionally skilled Scout Marines may theoretically be chosen, this is extremely rare; most inductees have survived and prevailed against numerous alien species.

Before deployment, the Deathwatch maintains detailed archives on each Marine’s combat history, oaths, specialisations, and behavioural traits. Kill‑team leaders consult these records to assemble squads whose combined expertise best suits the mission. Diversity of Chapter origin is considered a strength, allowing teams to draw upon a wide range of tactical traditions and battlefield experience.

Kill‑teams are typically between five and fifteen Astartes in size. Once a team has operated together long enough to fully exchange knowledge, it may be disbanded and its members reassigned to spread their accumulated experience across the wider Deathwatch.

Transport to operational zones is conducted via onyx‑hulled strike cruisers, guided by highly skilled Navigators and astropaths. These vessels allow kill‑teams to deploy rapidly and with precision, ensuring that even small detachments can strike at critical xenos targets before they threaten Imperial territory.

Service attitude.

For most Space Marine Chapters, service in the Deathwatch is regarded as an honourable calling. It represents a chance to take the fight directly to the xenos, to broaden a warrior’s experience, and to return with knowledge that strengthens the Chapter as a whole. Many Chapters maintain long traditions of seconding veterans to the Deathwatch, seeing it as both a duty to the wider Imperium and a means of refining their own doctrines through exposure to alien threats.

However, not all Chapters participate so readily. Across Imperial records there are references to several unnamed or deliberately unrecorded Chapters that have historically refused to send warriors to the Deathwatch. Official explanations are rarely provided, but persistent rumours suggest that such refusals often stem from concerns about the purity of a Chapter’s gene‑seed or from practices that would not withstand close scrutiny by the Inquisition. Since Deathwatch service requires full biological and psychological examination, as well as integration into mixed‑Chapter kill‑teams, some Chapters may avoid participation to prevent drawing attention to potential irregularities.

These cases are uncommon, and the Imperium does not publicly censure the Chapters involved. Nonetheless, their absence from Deathwatch rosters is noted in Inquisitorial archives, and the reasons for their reluctance remain a subject of speculation among those with access to such records.

+++ IMPERIAL COMMUNIQUÉ: PRIORITY GRADE SIGMA‑ULTIMA +++

+++ AUTHENTICATION: TRIA‑SEAL / SEGMENTUM PACIFICUS / ADEPTUS TERRA VERIFIED +++ +++ ORIGIN: 117TH HARAKONI “BELLEROPHON BLADES” REGIMENT ++++++ AUTHOR: COLONEL A. VARRON, COMMANDING OFFICER ++++++ ON BEHALF OF: GOVERNOR‑ELECT TALLERON OF BELLEROPHON‑VI ++++++ DESTINATION: ORDO XENOS LIAISON OFFICE, WATCH FORTRESS [REDACTED] ++++++ SECURITY CLEARANCE: ASTRA‑MILITARUM / LEVEL CASTELLAN +++

+++ SUBJECT: XENOS CONTACT REPORT AND REQUEST FOR ADEPTUS ASTARTES INTERVENTION +++

To the appointed representatives of the Ordo Xenos,

By directive of Governor‑Elect Talleron and under the authority vested in me as commanding officer of the 117th Harakoni Bellerophon Blades, I submit the following preliminary report concerning confirmed xenos activity within the Bellerophon Sub‑Sector. All data herein has been collated from frontline reconnaissance, orbital auspex sweeps, and attached regimental intelligence assets.

Further details follow in the attached segments.

+++ FIELD REPORT: UNCLASSIFIED STRUCTURE DISCOVERY / PERSONNEL LOSSES / URGENT REQUEST FOR ASSISTANCE +++

Honoured representatives of the Ordo Xenos,

Per standing orders, multiple reconnaissance elements of the 117th Harakoni Bellerophon Blades were deployed to survey an anomalous structure uncovered during routine excavation operations in the Bellerophon‑VI equatorial basin. Initial survey teams reported the presence of a circular construct of unknown alloy, partially buried and exhibiting no visible seams, inscriptions, or power sources. At the time of discovery, it was catalogued simply as an Unidentified Metallic Formation (UMF‑01) pending further analysis.

Within six hours of first contact, Scout Team Kappa‑Nine failed to report in. A second team, Theta‑Four, was dispatched to re‑establish communication. They also failed to return. Auspex sweeps detected no signs of conflict, weapons discharge, or biological remains. Vox traffic from both teams ceased abruptly and without distortion, suggesting deliberate suppression rather than equipment malfunction.

In response, I authorised deployment of a reinforced platoon under Lieutenant Harven to secure the perimeter and conduct a structured search. Their last transmission consisted of fragmented, incoherent reports describing “tall, lithe figures” moving around the structure and establishing what appeared to be controlled access points. No further communication has been received.

Rumours have begun circulating among the ranks — claims of shapes moving faster than human sight, of shadows that do not match their casters, of figures appearing and disappearing at the edge of vision. I have issued disciplinary warnings for spreading unverified battlefield superstition, but morale is deteriorating rapidly. The men are on edge, and I cannot guarantee continued operational stability without immediate reinforcement.

I must stress that we have lost three separate units in less than a standard day, with no trace of their fate and no identifiable enemy signatures. Whatever force is operating around the structure is doing so with precision, coordination, and capabilities beyond standard xenos contact parameters.

Given the escalating situation, the unknown nature of the construct, and the complete disappearance of trained personnel, I formally request Adeptus Astartes intervention under the authority of the Ordo Xenos. We are not equipped to counter an enemy we cannot track, identify, or even confirm visually with reliability.

Governor‑Elect Talleron concurs with this assessment and urges immediate action to prevent further loss of life and potential compromise of planetary security.

Awaiting your swift response.

— Colonel A. Varron 117th Harakoni “Bellerophon Blades” Regiment Acting under directive of Governor‑Elect Talleron, Bellerophon‑VI

+++ ADDENDUM III: URGENT — UNEXPLAINED MENTAL INTRUSIONS +++

I don’t have time for full protocol. Something is happening now.

Troopers are reporting flashes — not dreams — while awake. Whole squads freezing, staring at nothing. They say they see the world dead, like it’s already happened. Ash. Silence. The basin empty. Some swear they saw figures standing in the ruins, watching them.

I felt it too. A pressure in the skull, like someone pushing thoughts that aren’t mine. Not Warp‑taint. Not daemonic. Something colder. Older. Focused.

I can’t hold the line like this. They’re losing their nerve. I’m losing mine.

Please—send someone. Anyone.

— Varron

+++ ORDO XENOS COMMUNIQUÉ : CLEARANCE VERMILLION‑PRIORIS +++

+++ FROM: INQUISITOR‑MENTOR MACHARIUS, ORDO XENOS +++

+++ TO: GOVERNOR‑ELECT TALLERON, BELLEORPHON‑VI +++

+++ CC: WATCH FORTRESS [REDACTED], DEATHWATCH COMMAND +++

Governor‑Elect,

Your Colonel’s transmissions have been received, reviewed, and—despite their regrettable lack of composure—deemed credible enough to warrant escalation.

The description of the circular construct, the disappearances, and the psychic disturbances are consistent with Aeldari activity, specifically that of Asuryani Seers operating in proximity to a Webway Gate. Their kind has a long history of manipulating local perception, battlefield morale, and short‑range fate‑threads to weaken resistance before committing forces.

The presence of “tall, lithe figures” establishing controlled perimeters around the site further supports this assessment. I will not indulge speculation from your officers; the Ordo Xenos will determine the precise nature of the threat.

Unverified reports of Orkoid movement in the same region have been noted. Given the unreliability of such sightings and the tendency of local forces to misidentify xenos under stress, these claims remain unsubstantiated. They will not delay action.

Accordingly, I am authorising the deployment of a Deathwatch Kill‑team from Watch Fortress [REDACTED]. Their intervention will stabilise the situation and secure the structure for proper examination.

A probationary acolyte will accompany me during this operation. His presence is incidental and should not concern you; he will observe only. Provided he avoids the errors of his predecessor, his involvement will not impede proceedings.

Maintain order among your forces until arrival. Further panic will not be tolerated.

— Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Ordo Xenos

“Against the xenos, vigilance is victory.”

Training for the Fight.

Deathwatch kill‑teams are the primary operational units of the Chamber Militant of the Ordo Xenos. Each team is assembled with deliberate precision, drawing upon the strengths, histories, and battlefield specialisations of Astartes from multiple Chapters. This diversity is not incidental; it is the foundation of the Deathwatch’s effectiveness. Where one Chapter excels in close assault, another brings expertise in stealth, fortification warfare, or anti‑xenos marksmanship. Mixed‑Chapter composition ensures that every kill‑team possesses a broad tactical spectrum and can adapt to unfamiliar alien threats with minimal delay.

Kill‑team selection is conducted through exhaustive review of each Marine’s combat record, oaths, and behavioural traits. Commanders consult these archives to ensure that every member contributes unique, mission‑relevant experience. Once a kill‑team has operated together long enough to exchange its collective knowledge, it is often disbanded and re‑formed, allowing its members to disseminate their expertise across the wider Deathwatch. 

Training at a Watch Fortress is intensive and uncompromising. Newly inducted Astartes undergo hypno‑induction cycles that replay sensor‑feeds of their own Chapter’s historical engagements with xenos forces, reinforcing tactical memory and eliminating hesitation. The same hypno‑systems are used as corrective measures for any Marine who disrupts operational cohesion. Instruction in alien biology, behavioural patterns, and battlefield signatures is mandatory, ensuring that every kill‑team member can identify and exploit weaknesses across a wide range of species.

Librarians assigned to the Deathwatch undergo additional containment protocols. Warp‑suppression fields and psychic dampeners are employed during early training phases to ensure stability and prevent uncontrolled manifestations. Armour is withheld until later stages of integration, forcing recruits to rely on discipline and mental conditioning rather than instinctive reliance on war‑plate. Only once a Librarian has demonstrated full control under suppression conditions is he permitted to operate with standard kill‑team autonomy.

The result of this process is a force defined by precision, discipline, and efficiency. Where conventional Astartes companies act as the armoured fist of the Imperium, the Deathwatch functions as the scalpel—cutting away xenos threats with targeted, surgical force

+++ ORDO XENOS INTERNAL MEMORANDUM : CLEARANCE VERMILLION‑PRIORIS +++

+++ AUTHOR: INQUISITOR‑MENTOR MACHARIUS +++

+++ RECIPIENTS: WATCH FORTRESS [REDACTED] COMMAND STAFF +++

+++ SUBJECT: ACTIVATION OF KILL‑TEAM RHO / OPERATIONAL DIRECTIVE +++

Kill‑team Rho is to be activated immediately and placed under my operational authority for deployment to Belleorphon‑VI. Mission parameters will be delivered en route. Expect xenos contact of Aeldari origin; preliminary indicators suggest Seer‑level interference. Webway structures are strongly suspected. Local forces are compromised and of limited utility.

Ensure the team is briefed only on verified intelligence. Speculation from planetary authorities is to be disregarded. Their reports are exaggerated, undisciplined, and largely irrelevant to the Kill‑team’s operational requirements.

A probationary acolyte, Titus Cruor, will accompany me for observational purposes. His presence is not to interfere with Kill‑team preparations. I am aware of his… limitations. Should he fail to meet even the minimal expectations of his station, the matter will resolve itself without need for administrative attention.

Kill‑team Rho is to be fully armed, equipped, and ready for immediate transit. No delays. No deviations.

— Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Ordo Xenos

"When the Imperium sleeps, we keep the watch"

Arming for the Fight.

The Deathwatch armoury is configured to support rapid, high‑precision operations against xenos threats. Unlike conventional Astartes Chapters, whose wargear reflects long‑standing traditions and battlefield preferences, the Deathwatch maintains a strictly utilitarian approach. Every weapon, suit of armour, and specialised device is selected for its proven effectiveness against alien physiology and battlefield behaviour.

Specialised Ammunition.

Deathwatch boltguns are adapted to fire a wide range of ammunition types, each designed to counter specific xenos traits. Hellfire rounds deploy mutagenic acid ideal for penetrating Tyranid chitin, while Kraken penetrators provide enhanced armour‑piercing capability against Necron constructs and heavily armoured Orks. Dragonfire bolts are used to flush out enemies relying on concealment or cover. This flexibility allows kill‑teams to adjust their firepower mid‑engagement without altering their core loadout.

Adaptive Weapon Loadouts.

Kill‑teams draw from a broad armoury that includes Frag Cannons, Infernus Heavy Bolters, Stalker‑pattern boltguns, and a range of melta and plasma weapons. The emphasis is on adaptability: each Marine is expected to modify his armament according to mission parameters and the nature of the xenos threat. Heavy Thunder Hammers, Lightning Claws, and power weapons are issued for close‑quarters engagements where alien resilience or speed demands decisive melee capability. This modular approach ensures that kill‑teams can respond effectively to unknown or rapidly evolving threats.

Armour Variants.

Deathwatch Veterans typically operate in modified Mark VII or Mark VIII power armour, enhanced with reinforced plating and integrated auspex systems. Terminator armour is issued for operations requiring maximum durability, particularly against monstrous or heavily armoured foes. Primaris Marines serving in the Deathwatch utilise Mark X Tacticus, Gravis, or Phobos armour depending on their role, providing a balance of mobility, protection, and specialised battlefield functions. Each armour variant is maintained to exacting standards, with Chapter heraldry replaced by the black and silver of the Long Vigil.

Specialist Equipment.

Kill‑teams employ a range of mission‑specific devices, including teleport homers, stasis charges, and xenotech‑countermeasure fields. Auspex arrays are calibrated to detect alien energy signatures, while combat blades and power weapons are treated with anti‑xenos unguents and rites to ensure reliability under extreme conditions. Librarians receive additional containment gear to stabilise psychic output during operations, particularly when confronting warp‑active species such as Tyranids or Aeldari Seers.

Operational Efficiency.

The Deathwatch’s approach to wargear reflects its broader doctrine: precision, discipline, and adaptability. Every item issued is selected to maximise operational effectiveness and minimise logistical burden. Kill‑teams are expected to maintain full familiarity with all standard and specialist equipment, enabling them to reconfigure their loadouts rapidly in response to mission demands. This high level of proficiency ensures that even small detachments can deliver decisive force against threats that would overwhelm conventional Imperial forces.

+++ ORDO XENOS INTERNAL MEMORANDUM: CLEARANCE VERMILLION‑PRIORIS +++

+++ AUTHOR: INQUISITOR‑MENTOR MACHARIUS +++

+++ RECIPIENTS: WATCH FORTRESS [REDACTED] COMMAND STAFF +++

+++ SUBJECT: KILL‑TEAM RHO — SEALED MISSION DIRECTIVE +++

Kill‑team Rho is hereby assigned primary operational responsibility for the Belleorphon‑VI incident. Mission parameters are as follows:

1. Objective: Secure the xenos Seer operating within the vicinity of the anomalous structure. Capture is mandatory. Termination is permissible only if extraction becomes impossible. The strategic value of a living Aeldari Farseer is self‑evident and does not require elaboration.

2. Secondary Objective: Stabilise the region sufficiently to allow Ordo Xenos examination of the suspected Webway aperture. Local Imperial forces are considered expendable for this purpose. Their performance to date has been substandard, and their continued losses are operationally acceptable.

3. Tertiary Considerations: Unverified reports of Orkoid presence have been logged. These are likely misidentifications by panicked militia elements, but Kill‑team Rho is to remain alert to the possibility of opportunistic interference. Should such interference occur, it is to be dealt with swiftly and without deviation from the primary objective.

A probationary acolyte, Titus Cruor, will accompany me for observational purposes. His involvement is minimal and should not impede Kill‑team deployment. I am aware of his recent inquiries regarding the Tarnis operation; such curiosity is ill‑advised. Should he prove a liability, the matter will resolve itself without administrative burden.

Kill‑team Rho is to deploy immediately. Further delays will only compound the failures already demonstrated by the planetary defence forces, whose conduct will be addressed upon my arrival.

— Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Ordo Xenos

“Knowledge is our shield, purity is our blade.”

The Missions of the Watch.

The Deathwatch conducts a wide spectrum of missions across the Imperium, each designed to neutralise xenos threats before they can escalate into full‑scale conflict. Unlike conventional Astartes forces, which operate as shock troops or strategic line‑breakers, Deathwatch kill‑teams are deployed with precision and minimal visibility. Their operations are typically covert, highly specialised, and executed with strict discipline.

Targeted Elimination.

One of the most common Deathwatch operations involves the removal of key xenos leaders, synaptic nodes, warlords, or command organisms. By severing the head of an alien force, the Deathwatch can collapse entire invasions before they fully manifest. These missions require rapid infiltration, decisive strikes, and immediate extraction, often carried out by Purgatus or Dominatus kill‑teams trained for precision decapitation tactics ().

Containment of Emerging Threats.

Kill‑teams are frequently dispatched to neutralise xenos activity near sites of strategic or Inquisitorial importance. This includes preventing alien infiltration of research stations, astropathic relays, or archaeological dig sites. Such missions demand adaptability, as kill‑teams may encounter unknown species or unclassified bioforms requiring on‑the‑spot tactical assessment.

Boarding Actions and Ship Raids.

Deathwatch forces are trained to infiltrate and sabotage xenos vessels, from Ork Kill‑Kroozers to Tyranid bio‑ships. These operations often involve planting demolition charges, disabling propulsion systems, or extracting data‑cores for Inquisitorial analysis. The confined environments of alien craft require disciplined fire control and close‑quarters proficiency

Extraction of High‑Value Individuals.

When Imperial citizens, researchers, or officials are captured by xenos forces, the Deathwatch may be deployed to recover them. These missions prioritise speed and precision, as prolonged captivity increases the risk of assimilation, experimentation, or psychic compromise. Kill‑teams are expected to operate independently for extended periods, often behind enemy lines

Infiltration and Disruption of Xenos Cults.

The Deathwatch is authorised to intervene in the early stages of xenos‑aligned cult formation. This includes covert elimination of cult leaders, seizure of artefacts, and disruption of communication networks. Such operations require a balance of stealth and overwhelming force, ensuring the threat is neutralised without alerting the wider population.

Acquisition of Xenos Technology.

When alien artefacts or devices of strategic value are discovered, kill‑teams may be tasked with securing them for Ordo Xenos study. These missions often involve hostile environments, unstable technology, or competing factions attempting to claim the artefact. Kill‑teams are trained to identify, isolate, and extract such items with minimal collateral damage.

+++ ORDO XENOS — KILL‑TEAM PERSONNEL ORDER +++

+++ CLEARANCE: VERMILLION‑PRIORIS +++

+++ AUTHOR: INQUISITOR‑MENTOR MACHARIUS +++

+++ SUBJECT: CONFIRMATION OF KILL‑TEAM RHO ASSIGNMENT +++

Kill‑team Rho has been formally assembled for Operation Glass Veil. The following personnel are confirmed and cleared for deployment. Their Chapters, temperaments, and specialisations have been noted only insofar as they affect operational efficiency. They are to be regarded as tools — nothing more — and will be expended as required.

Rho‑Alpha — Execrator‑Chaplain Leandros

Chapter: Black Templars A suitable commander: disciplined, doctrinally rigid, and unencumbered by hesitation. His presence will ensure compliance among the others. He is authorised to enact immediate correction should any member fail to meet Deathwatch standards.

Rho‑One — Brother Cassius

Chapter: Crimson Fists Selected due to his Chapter’s long‑standing animosity toward Orkoid species. Should the unverified Ork reports prove accurate, Cassius is expected to prosecute the matter with appropriate enthusiasm. He is reminded that failure, in this context, would be… disappointing.

Rho‑Two — Brother Korsis

Chapter: Raven Guard Stealth and reconnaissance specialist. His skills will compensate for the regrettable lack of subtlety displayed by local forces. Korsis is to provide forward observation and confirm the Farseer’s movements.

Rho‑Three — Techmarine Sicarius

Chapter: Consecrators Responsible for maintaining operational integrity of all wargear and for securing any xenos artefacts recovered from the site. Sicarius is authorised to override local Mechanicus personnel as required.

Rho‑Four — Codicier Zael

Chapter: Carcharodon Astra Psychic oversight. Warp‑discipline protocols remain in effect until I personally rescind them. Zael is to counter any further mental interference from the Aeldari Seer and ensure the Kill‑team remains mentally stable.

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

A probationary acolyte, Titus Cruor, will accompany me. His presence is incidental. He is not to interact with the Kill‑team unless instructed. Should he fail to meet expectations, the matter will be resolved without administrative burden.

Kill‑team Rho is to embark immediately. Their purpose is singular. Their vigil is unending. Their fate is irrelevant.

— Inquisitor‑Mentor Macharius Ordo Xenos

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

“One purpose. One vigil. One fate for the xenos.”

End of Part I

With Kill‑team Rho deployed under Inquisitorial authority and the situation on Belleorphon‑VI formally escalated to a xenos‑class incursion, the matter now passes beyond the capacity of local forces. The failures of the planetary defence have been noted, and disciplinary measures will follow pending operational review. What remains clear is that the events surrounding the anomalous structure, the disappearances, and the psychic disturbances originate from a source far older and far more deliberate than the panicked reports of the Guard suggest.

Part II will examine this conflict from the opposite vector: the Eldar presence, the nature of the Webway aperture, and the intentions of the Farseer whose actions have already shaped the fate‑threads of Bellerophon‑VI long before Imperial boots touched the basin floor.

The Long Vigil continues. Part II awaits.

- Until The Next Hunt -



Lore Post - Bane of the Xenos post 3 of 3

  Bane of the Xenos. The Wandering Remnants of a Fallen Empire. The Craftworlds are not mere starships; they are planetoid‑sized, psychoacti...