"You crazy?" said Tom.
"No harm looking."
That afternoon she visited the mailbox six times. On the seventh, a woodchuck jumped out. Tom stood laughing in the door, pounding his knees. Cora chased him out of the house, still laughing.
Then she stood in the window looking down at her mailbox right across from Mrs. Brabbam's. Ten years ago the Widow Lady had plunked her letter box right under Cora's nose, almost, when she could as easily have built it up nearer her own cabin. But it gave Mrs. Brabbam an excuse to float like a flower on a river down the hill path, flip the box wide with a great coughing and rustling, from time to time spying to see if Cora was watching. Cora always was. When caught, she pretended to sprinkle flowers with an empty watering can, or pick mushrooms in the wrong season.
Next morning Cora was up before the sun had warmed the strawberry patch or the wind had stirred the pines.
Benjy was sitting up in his cot when Cora returned from the mailbox. "Too early," he said. "Postman won't drive by yet."
"Drive by?"
"They come in cars this far out."
"Oh." Cora sat down.
"You sick, Aunt Cora?"
"No, no." She blinked. "It's just, I don't recall in twenty years seeing no mail truck whistle by here. It just came to me. All this time, I never seen no mailman at all."
"Maybe he comes when you're not around."
"I'm up with the fog spunks, down with the chickens. I never really gave it a thought, of course, but--" She turned to look out the window, up at Mrs. Brabbam's house. "Benjy, I got a kind of sneaking hunch." She stood up and walked straight out of the cabin, down the dust path, Benjy following, across the thin road to Mrs. Brabbam's mailbox. A hush was on the fields and hills. It was so early it made you whisper.
"Don't break the law, Aunt Cora!"
"Shh! Here." She opened the box, put her hand in like someone fumbling in a gopher hole. "And here, and here." She rattled some letters into his cupped hands.
"Why, these been opened already! You open these, Aunt Cora?"
"Child, I never touched them." Her face was stunned. "This is the first time in my life I ever even let my shadow touch this box."
Benjy turned the letters around and around, cocking his head. "Why, Aunt Cora, these letters, they're ten years old!"
"What!" Cora grabbed at them.
"Aunt Cora, that lady's been getting the same mail every day for years. And they're not even addressed to Mrs. Brabbam, they're to some woman named Ortega in Green Fork."
"Ortega, the Mexican grocery woman! All these years," whispered Cora, staring at the worn mail in her hands. "All these years."
They gazed up at Mrs. Brabbam's sleeping house in the cool quiet morning.
"Oh, that sly woman, making a commotion with her letters, making me feel small. All puffed out she was, swishing along, reading her mail."
Mrs. Brabbam's front door opened.
"Put them back, Aunt Cora!"
Cora slammed the mailbox shut with time to spare.
Mrs. Brabbam drifted down the path, stopping here or there, quietly, to peer at the opening wild flowers.
"Morning," she said sweetly.
"Mrs. Brabbam, this is my nephew Benjy."
"How nice." Mrs. Brabbam, with a great swivel of her body, a flourish of her flour-white hands, rapped the mailbox