[When Wilderness Was King by Randall Parrish]@TWC D-Link bookWhen Wilderness Was King CHAPTER I 5/9
Said as how it was mighty important; but blamed if this was n't the fust chance he 's hed to git it over yere sence.
I told him I 'd fetch it, as it was n't more nor a dozen miles er so outer my way." He held out a square paper packet; and while I turned it over curiously in my hand,--the first letter I had ever seen,--he took some loose tobacco from an outside pocket and proceeded leisurely to fill his pipe. My mother rolled my father's chair forward into the open doorway, and stood close behind him, as was her custom, one arm resting lightly upon the quaintly carved chair-back. "What is it, John ?" she questioned gently.
Instantly aroused by her voice, I crossed quickly over and placed the packet in my father's thin hands.
He turned it over twice before he opened it, looking at the odd seal, and reading the superscription carefully aloud, as if fearful there might be some mistake: "Major David Wayland, Along the Upper Maumee. Leave at Hawkins Ford on Military Road." "Important." I can see him yet as he read it, slowly feeling his way through the rude, uneven writing, with my mother leaning over his shoulder and helping him, her rosy cheeks and dark tresses making strange contrast beside his pain-racked features and iron-gray hair. "Read it aloud, Mary," he said at last.
"I shall understand it better. 'T is from Roger Matherson, of whom you have heard me speak." My mother was a good scholar, and she read clearly, only hesitating now and, then over some ill-written or misspelled word. At FORT DEARBORN, near the head of the Great Lake.
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