Neko had spent a day traveling and exploring the forests southwest of home in hopes of finding more useful herbs before winter set in. The first day had passed uneventfully, and she had found a place to sleep for the night. The following morning, she was up again at first light. She caught a rabbit and ate before traveling further.
Around mid-morning, she noticed a pleasant and familiar scent on the breeze, but she couldn’t identify it. Following the scent as it was occasionally carried on the breeze, she finally tracked it down to what at first appeared to be chunks of bark on birch trees. When she looked closer, she realized that what she had thought were chunks of bark were in fact mushrooms.
She examined the mushrooms and searched her memory for the familiar scent, trying to remember if her mother had ever said anything about them. She could remember most of the common mushrooms and which ones were edible, which ones were poisonous, and which ones were medicinal. She knew that the shelf fungus that often grew on the sides of trees was generally useless at best, but for some reason, she thought this one was useful. She wished she could remember it, or anything that her mother might have told her about it.
(Ironically, the mushroom that Neko couldn’t remember was known for improving memory.)