The church of Chandon is loosely bound and without a central hierarchy. The followers of Chandon sometimes form in bands, called Hunts. The are local, independent cells, without any far-reaching chain of command.

They are forbidden from slaying the young or the pregnant, and will cull the weak and lame from animal groups. More extreme Hunts evoke wanton slaughter, believing it is an honor to Chandon to make the killing bloody and long. Such Hunts are considered heretical by the main church. At the other extreme, some Hunts will choose a village in the wilderness. They provide food for the people, and one or two pledge themselves to keeping the village fed through a harsh winter.

Some clergy also preach the joy and bounty of the hunt and work to thwart the expansion of civilization to preserve as much wilderness as possible. To this end, they stage raids and acts of vandalism that are popular with outlaws and bored young nobles.

Temples of Chandon are rare, as most Hunts eschew formal buildings for shadowed wilderness glades. The closest to a structure that Hunts use consist of inwardly curving, fang-shaped stones arranged in a ring.

Credits

Symbol art created by the author.