Cerunnos

Cerunnos, also known as the Master of the Hunt, was a firbolg and archfey who was worshiped on some worlds as a deity, a member of the Celtic pantheon.

Description
Due to the magical effects of the Wild Hunt, descriptions of Cerunnos by those who survived encounters with him tended to vary. Some described him as having jet black skin, others as having a body covered in fur with a short, full beard and the legs of a stag, and still others said he had had skin that was dyed in blue patterns with woad. But he was always described as having blazing green eyes with a head crowned with stag antlers. His face was always partially hidden, whether by a hunting helmet or by shadows when holding court, and he gave off a palpable predatory aura.

Those who saw him various described Cerunnos wearing a suit of black leather, a hunting helmet that was black in color and made of metal and leather, or little but a hide kilt and a wolfskin cloak. He also typically wore a torc, symbolizing his former place among the fey nobility.

Personality
An a personification of nature, as well as an embodiment the vigor and violence associated with hunting, Cerunnos was of dual natures. A giver and taker of life, gentle one moment while violent and unrelenting the next. With his greatest responsibility being to maintain the balance of nature itself.

Whenever he engaged in the Wild Hunt Cerunnos became reduced to a single-minded, enraged state not unlike that of berserkers. Refusing to speak until the hunt was done, often seeking out the most dangerous prey, and fighting evil creatures to the death. If ever slain by his prey, he would often continue to return until they were either slain themselves or driven from the land of Celtic worshipers.

Abilities
Cerunnos was immune to charm and sleep effects. He could see in areas of total darkness. And he was capable of calling upon any animal within a radius to his aid, even magical beasts. He particularly had control over a breed of dogs known as Wild Hunt hounds, who accompanied him on every Wild Hunt.

Cerunnos could never be truly killed, always reconstituting himself after a Wild Hunt.

Possessions
He typically carried a hunting horn, known as the Horn of the Undying, whose sound could reach across any distance when used by Cerunnos. He would typically sound this horn behind his pack of hounds at every increment of a chase. Legends claimed that those who knew the proper rituals could use the horn to summon and even control the Wild hunt. If this ever occurred, Cerunnos would begrudgingly obey the wielder, but left clues for others on how to break the summoning and thus set the Wild Hunt free.

In terms of weaponry Cerunnos possessed an enchanted +3 spear, which inflicted foes with electricity and could teleport them, and a heavy oaken quarterstaff. The latter two being because he preferred fighting close quarters. Additionally, some claimed that he rode around on a two-horse chariot.

History
The details of Cerunnos's birth were a mystery. The story of his life truly began when the Witch of Fates brought him, a baby firbolg, to the Green Court and presented him to its lord Oran. She foretold the child of being destined to become Oran's greatest hunter, but that his true fate would be known to him upon gazing in the Lake of Dreams, after which only darkness would follow for him.

Oran bestowed upon the child the name Cerunnos and he grew to be the great hunter the witch foretold of. Though his childhood would be marked by shame being heaped upon him by his the true daughters of Oran, who derided his status as an adopted child.

During this period of his life Cerunnos never took more than what was needed, showing great reverence for wildlife, and enjoyed wandering deep into the wilds. Only avoiding the Lake of Dreams, as Oran had forbidden him to go near it. This all changed one year when Oran held his annual hunt for the Silver Hind &mdash; a mystical deer said to be impossible to slay &mdash; during which Cerunnos became the first ever to ever strike it with an arrow.

Cerunnos tracked the wounded hind, determined to bring it back as a trophy for Oran, and drove it to a cliff overlooking the Lake of Dreams. He grappled the Silver Hind, prepared to plunge a knife into it, but hesitated as he looked into its eyes. In that moment it leapt up, throwing Cerunnos off the cliff and plunging into the Lake of Dreams.

What Cerunnos saw within its depths was unknown to others &mdash; possibilities included his true parentage, the dark fate that awaited him, and a cosmic truth of the hunt itself &mdash; but whatever he saw had evidently changed him. When he returned to his father, Oran was filled with an explicable rage and exiled him, cursing Cerunnos to be a homeless wanderer.

Following his exile, Cerunnos became obsessed with tracking down the Silver Hind, convinced it could redeem him. Believing it may be a creature born of winter, Cerunnos traveled to the domain of the Prince of Frost. He offered to reveal the secret of the Silver Hind and give him a place in the Winter Court, but only if he could capture the daughters of Oran and deliver them to the Fortress of Frozen Tears in the Vale of the Long Night.

He agreed to the condition and with an entourage of the Winter Court's fey he tracked down his adopted kin. Seeing in their faces the same look that he’d seen in the eyes of the Silver Hind, he hesitated once more and turned upon the Winter Fey, realizing their fate with the Pale Prince would be worse than death. He slew many of the Winter Fey, driving off those that remained. Enraged at his betrayal, the Prince of Frost barred his from the Winter Court and cursed him to always be just beyond the reach of what he hunts.

Cerunnos then traveled to Senaliesse, the domain of the Summer Queen Tiandra. She agreed to reveal the Silver Hind to him, but only if he could decide whether she or the hind was fairer and until then he had to stay his hand against the beast. As days past in their wait for the hind's arrival, Tiandra grew enamored with Cerunnos. She decided to make him a knight of her court and a consort when the Silver Hind finally arrived. Cerunnos himself grew content within her silver grove.

When the Silver Hind finally arrived it revealed itself to be the archfey known as the Maiden of the Moon, discarding her bestial guise for that of a fierce noble eladrin maiden with a silver sword at the hip and a bow of white wood on the back. Left breathless by her intense presence, Cerunnos quickly declared her to be the fairest fey maiden in the Summer Court. Enraged by this, Tiandra banished her and cursed Cerunnos to work in darkness as a bloodthirsty slayer. Antlers then emerged on his head, making him as Tiandra put it, "a stag for his hind."

Finding no welcome in most of the fey courts, Cerunnos retreated into the Gloaming Court with those loyal to him. As he searched over the years for a way to break his curses he slid further into savagery, the Gloaming Court becoming like a prison. Eventually some time after this, he became a member of the Celtic pantheon, a pantheon that was known to be willing to welcome most any deity (or in this case an archfey, beings who were nearly god-like ) into their ranks.

Activities


Cerunnos was chiefly known as the leader of a supernatural phenomenon called the Wild Hunt.

Relationships
Cerunnos was deeply in love with the Maiden of the Moon and went to great lengths to please her, but the bloodthirsty and unprincipled methods he utilized because of the curses placed upon him were distasteful to her. Sometimes she called upon his Wild Hunt to descend upon evildoers, particularly her sworn enemies the lycanthropes.

Kannoth, the eladrin vampire lord of Cendriane, held a bond of loyalty with Cerunnos after participating in one of his Wild Hunts. Because of this, his undead minions occasionally rode in the Wild Hunt.

Worshipers
Cerunnos was worshiped by some firbolgs, who respected him as one of the few beings capable of bringing feuds between clans to an end.

Some warlocks were known to make pacts with him, either because they too suffered from an elusive quarry or they hoped to free someone that had been abducted by the Wild Hunt. In the latter case, a warlock often wound up riding as a member of the Wild Hunt for the rest of their life.