It was early in the day, but the sun was already bright in the blue sky. After a simple breakfast of bread, freshly churned butter, and warm spiced black tea, Susanna had ventured out to the area close to her cottage where she tended her herbs, vegetables, and flowers. She was glad the weather was at last warm enough for to be outside in the sunlight.
Her adored animal companion, a grey fox named Jack, was curled up nearby. He always kept watch over his Susanna.
Jack was Susanna's sole companion. The residents of the nearby village avoided her like the plague. They were afraid of her. Everyone said that she was a witch. Why, she had to be, didn't she, with that flame red hair of hers, and those fiery emerald catlike eyes. Besides, she wasn't a local, and she had the audacity to take up residence near the village, and not explain how she came to be here. The general consensus of the villagers seemed to be: she'll leave if she gets cold and hungry enough.....only, so far, she hadn't left.
The soil had hardened during the cold winter, and Susanna found as she worked it that it was difficult to break up with only her hands, so she got a small hoe and began to dig with it, as best she could. Slowly but surely, she made progress. As she lifted the hoe and brought it down again, she felt(and heard) a sound as it struck something under the soil. A large stone, perhaps?, She thought to herself. She touched the hoe down in the same spot, and heard the same noise.
Out of curiosity, mostly, she laid the hoe on the ground, and dropped to her knees. With both hands, she began brushing the dirt away, to see what was hidden in the dirt. She discovered that it wasn't just a stone; it was much to large for that. It was actually an old iron chest. She picked up a stick and a stone, and began trying to pry open the rusty lock of it open, so that she could see what was inside.
At last, success! The lock popped open!
Jack trotted over to see what treasure his Susanna had found. She rubbed his ears affectionately.
Her green eyes opened wide when she saw what was in the truck: antique, real gold coins!
She didn't stop to count them, she just hugged Jack tightly, and happily.
"We won't be hungry or cold any longer, Jack! ", She promised him. He barked his pleasure to her, and she laughed.
"The villagers may hate us, but they'll take the money easily enough", she told him. She took a handful of coins out of the chest, then closed it and recovered it with enough dirt so that it was hidden in the midst of her garden plot. Not that she ever had visitors; it was merely a reasonable precaution.
She went inside with Jack and changed into a green dress that matched her eyes, and covered it with a green cloak of the same shade. She and Jack made the short walk into the village for supplies. After the first shop that they went in, for wine and cheese, it seemed that they attracted followers...at a safe difference, of course, since she was a witch. Susanna found that she was right....they took the coins eagerly enough.
Susanna carried a large cloth bag on the way home from the village, and Jack helped by carrying a small bag between his teeth for her. There were all sorts of delights within: wine, cheese, flour, wildflower honey, spices, a package of dried apples, and fresh winter vegetables and herbs to supplement those that Susanna had managed to harvest and store for them out of her own garden.
She bought some cloth for new clothes, a pair of shoes, and a pair of gloves. Lastly, candles, and a heavier quilt for the bed, so that she and Jack would be warmer at night. Jack seemed especially interested in the freshly caught fish she had bought to prepare for that night's dinner. "Tonight we dine like royalty, Jack.", she told her adored shape-shifting fox.
Just as they arrived back at the cottage from their trip into the village, a soft misty rain began to fall, and Susanna and Jack hurried inside out of the harsh elements.
Susanna lighted two of the beeswax candles that she had purchased in the village, and opened a bottle of the crimson wine, so that it could breathe. When she turned around, her beloved Jack had shape-shifted to his human form and was building a fire for them to relax by, and savor a glass of wine together. He wrapped his arms around his Susanna and kissed her.