An Egg & a Cup of Tea
The woman's space was small, but there were flowers. It was the time of year for white flowers, so white flowers there were. Had it been the time of year for red flowers, there would have been those instead. The vase was glass, nothing fancy, but the place was nicer for it. It had been a gift from a passing peddler whose ailment had been remedied. The woman had an egg and a cup of tea. The world, which had been slightly darker on the one side of breakfast, was slightly lighter on the other side.
Then, to work.
Herbs to gather and grind, a garden to weed, vinegars to soak and strain, villagers to tend, stories to tell all the while.
The villagers were happy to have her aid, but happier to have her stories. The stories were easy to have and just as easy to let go, which is why stories spread as gold does not. The tales went far and wide, not like a ripple from a drop in the ocean, but like mass rolling down a hill picking up bits as it goes.
While the stories went, the woman stayed, and started each day with an egg and a cup of tea. Then she did her herbs and aid, weeding and telling. When she died, the egg and the tea died with her, the herbs and the aid were taking on by someone else.
But the stories, they lived.
Which, in a metaphysical sense, is all comfort.