“Do not attempt to understand the things that emerge from that foul realm, my Sisters. It is only necessary that you hate them.”
–Canoness Challant, before the Purging of Ferrom
The region of space that encompasses the Askellon Sector has long been tied to the Warp. This is also true of those who live under Askelline stars, a link that the Pandaemonium's unending cry for vengeance rails against with each surge of the Great Storm. Inquisitors of the Ordo Malleus and their Acolytes have made examining any relation of this nature, especially between the founders of Askellon and the Great Storm, a priority in their work within the sector. Though there are many suspicions, there are also countless layers of secrecy. The many centuries have turned any semblance of fact into mythical lore, and the ongoing efforts of the powerful to ensure their histories remain undisturbed, such that even Inquisitors have found themselves stymied when attempting to forcefully wield their authority. Unravelling any hidden connections has thus become a silent war, fought through deceit and cunning.
Perhaps this connection began even before humanity first encountered Askelline worlds, for the Lay of Askellios relates how the original settlers braved many Warp storms and other perils after departing Terra so many millennia ago. Unseen hands seemed to raise up eldritch barricades at every turn along their journey, and many were lost to horrors for which they had no comprehension or defences. Finally, after what seemed like ages of travel, the fleets found a serene area free of storms. It was far from their projected colonisation zone, but after so long in space, its peace projected a sense of welcome that few could refuse. Those who voiced any concerns that there might have been unknown influences guiding their journey were quickly silenced— through violence where necessary.
Over the following millennia, the humans of Askellon discovered that this serenity was not common for their stars. During the many Wars of Purgation against the xenos species who dared exist where Mankind was present, almost every alien civilisation encountered had records of the Warp and the entities that crept from that unholy realm. Tales of terrible gods permeated these tales, often as part of the crumbling ruins of long-extinct races. The rise of the Pandaemonium, later traced back to the union of the original colonists under one rule but seemingly to have existed even before those shrouded days, grew with each generation as well. A number of Askelline sages feared the sector would suffer a fate similar to that of civilisations before them, something else that grows with each generation.
Inquisitors of the Ordo Malleus who operate within the sector see these tales as a sign that Chaos has also operated in Askellian space from times immemorial, and had a clawed talon in the destiny in innumerable empires. That even these once-mighty races fell to the Ruinous Powers is yet another sign that the threats from beyond are surely the greatest Mankind faces. Many have been tied to specific Daemon Princes and other entities too dangerous to be named, with visitations throughout the millennia that doomed one race after another. Many of these Warp-tainted ruins have been kept secret—buried or razed to dust—lest others discover the horrid nature of what destroyed these alien dominions. A populace that retains its ignorance of the Enemies Beyond is one that can be saved—while one that knows of these dangers is one already lost.