You fold a sheet of paper with your message, slide it into an envelope, affix a stamp, and carry it to the neighborhood mailbox. With a quick lift of the metal flap, the envelope disappears inside.
In that instant, nothing happens. The mailbox stands as before—blue, sturdy, silent. No indicator lights up, no confirmation beeps, no visible movement occurs. You walk back to your door, and the day proceeds unchanged.
Days slip by. Perhaps three, maybe five. You pass the same mailbox daily; it opens and closes for others. Checks of your own mail bring bills or ads, but no echo of your action. The letter's progress stays completely out of sight—no tracking slip, no postcard reply, no hint it even left.
Then, across town or state lines, the recipient approaches their box. They retrieve the bundle, spot your familiar handwriting on the envelope, and take it indoors. The seal breaks; the words become visible. Delivery has arrived.
The slot drop and the reading sit separated by those quiet days. Time alone holds the gap where no outcome showed.
