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That's what the Kid wanted to talk to Wallace about when he wrote the second letter, in March 1881.
He was in the Santa Fe jail at the time, facing trial for the murder of Sheriff William Brady during the Lincoln County War and increasingly desperate for a pardon. He would shortly be convicted and sentenced to hang -- although his famous jail escape in Lincoln County would save his neck for a time.
The handwriting in the two letters appears different. In the earlier letter, it's more slanted and flowing and formal -- the Spencerian penmanship popular at the time. In the second letter, it's more constrained.
"They know he was literate. They know he could write well. But they haven't figured out quite yet why some of the handwritings are so different," said Jaehn, the librarian.
McCubbin suggests he could have dictated the jail letter, which he said would make it no less authentic -- it's "expressing what the Kid wanted to express," he said. He said further examination should be done.
Cooper, who did extensive research for her novel, is convinced the handwriting is different because when the Kid wrote the letter from jail, he was in handcuffs. In another letter from the jail, to a lawyer, he apologized for his bad writing, saying he was shackled.
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On the Net:
Billy the Kid Web site:
http://www.newmexico.org/billythekid/
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