Selina did not return to being an “expert.” She returned to being a student . She started a new blog, not called “Selina Knows,” but “Selina Learns.” She wrote openly about the misidentification. She posted side-by-side photos of the woodtuft and the funeral bell, highlighting the tiny, life-saving differences she had once been too proud to double-check. She began each foraging walk with a new ritual: “I have been wrong before,” she would say. “Please question everything I show you.”
“I taught you to see ,” her grandmother said. “And seeing begins with admitting you are blind. Your shame isn’t a punishment, Selina. It’s your new eyes. The only people who never poison anyone are the ones who never feed anyone. The question is: will you let your shame make you small, or will you let it make you careful?”
For weeks, Selina hid. She stopped answering calls. She pulled down her foraging blog. The word “expert” now felt like a brand on her skin. She was certain everyone was whispering, “She nearly killed her own niece.” She avoided the woods entirely, as if the trees themselves might judge her.
Her grandmother nodded slowly. “Good. That’s the first true thing you’ve said in years.”
One evening, her grandmother, now frail and in a wheelchair, asked to be taken to the old forest path. Selina pushed her in silence. At the first fork, her grandmother pointed a gnarled finger at a cluster of brown caps. “What are those?” she asked.
At the hospital, the toxicologist delivered the verdict: Galerina marginata . The “funeral bell.” It looked almost identical to the woodtuft but carried the same deadly amatoxins as the destroying angel. Selina had been wrong. Everyone survived, but only after gastric lavage, activated charcoal, and three days of intensive monitoring.