@Kagehide save my dumb son. he ate some Inocybe lanuginosa
Well, Mako didn't know enough to say that this wasn't going how it should. But the boy could very well tell when things were going bad. It all began with an awful churning in his stomach, the cramping hitting him like a knife twisting in his guts. He had expected something different, something enlightening. Sure, he hadn't paid terribly close attention when his elders murmured of a little brown-capped mushroom that let you speak with the gods. After all, one little brown mushroom was the same as any other, right?
There was nothing wrong with wanting to see the otherworldly being that was apparently his sire, was there? He had thought about it for a while, and couldn't believe his luck when he found the small cluster of light-brown caps set among some grass and leaf-litter, the snow melted in a small circle where the mountain's molten core heated the surface just enough to allow the fungus to flourish even in the dead of winter.
So down the hatch they went, and Mako cursed his luck and his existence and the damned mountain and everything else on it as he staggered forward just an hour later. The ground swung unsteadily back and forth in a blur, his eyes unfocused and damp as trails of dark tears curved down the sides of his muzzle. The elders had never spoken of the excruciating and infinite pain of his stomach clenching around the damned mushrooms. Saliva flooded his mouth, spilling out at the edges in long strings and Mako just wished the burning in his gut would stop. He retched, finally bile and chewed mushrooms plopping onto the ground before him. He would have thought that would have freed him from this torment -- this hell on earth, really -- but the poison had already taken its hold. He took a few unsteady steps over the pile of sick before his body unceremoniously decided that he needed to be ejecting material from both ends. At once.