Dead Letters to Tomorrow
On his first morning of retirement, Edwin Marsh swept the old Hollowbrook post office one last time. Behind a coat rack he found a brass mail slot in a wall that never had one. The little plate read TOMORROW'S DEPARTURES. As a joke, he scribbled a grocery list and fed it in. By noon, the milk he'd written down sat on his porch, in a glass bottle stamped with tomorrow's date.
Edwin's hands shook, but he grinned. He grabbed a pen and wrote a careful request: 'Tomorrow's newspaper, please.' He folded it and slid it into the brass slot. Then he sat by the window to wait, watching the empty road.
At noon the newspaper thumped onto his porch, dated the next day. The front page screamed: BRIDGE COLLAPSES ON RIVER ROAD, FIVE HURT. Edwin's stomach dropped. The accident hadn't happened yet. He could still stop it.
Edwin decided to fix the bridge himself before morning. He loaded his truck with planks and rope and drove out to the old crossing, working under the stars to brace the weakest beam.
By sunrise, Edwin's repair held. The first car rolled across the patched bridge with a gentle bounce, and the driver waved thanks. The newspaper's grim headline never came true. Edwin drove home tired, muddy, and prouder than he'd ever been at the post office.