THE CASE OF MARY ELLEN
she tell you about a letter Mary Ellen wrote me when"—the colonel paused and cleared his throat—"about a letter Mary Ellen wrote me in the seventies?"
"She did," I replied.
"Well, here's the letter," he said, after fumbling in his big pocketbook. "It's not a matter to be showing around, but you seem almost like one of the family, and you'll know better how to appreciate the pictures when you read that."
He turned and went out of the room into the hallway and then to the veranda, where I heard his firm and measured step pacing back and forth. The letter was not a very long one, but there was something in it—a vague undertone of loneliness, a muffled cry for sympathy, which, as I knew all the facts of the case, almost took my breath away.
The letter was dated "Boston, September 8th, 1878," and was as follows:
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