Mrs. Paine. Marina talked to me of her hopes that what problems they had in the marriage would work out, and Lee appeared to me happy when he was with Marina and June, and glad to see them, and I also felt that Marina remained somewhat uncomfortable accepting from someone else, that she preferred the more independent situation.
Mr. Jenner. State?
Mrs. Paine. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. But you had no inkling at all or any feeling, the sense on his part either directly from him or through Marina that he might not continue in the position, that is the Texas School Depository or might not continue to live in the Dallas area?
Mrs. Paine. I had no such feeling. My expectation was contrary.
Mr. Jenner. When you read Commission Exhibit 103, which I have described as the Mexico letter that you found on your desk secretary, did you have any feeling after you read that that Lee might have in mind going to Havana or going back to Russia through Mexico, or some other manner or means?
Mrs. Paine. No; I really didn't.
Mr. Jenner. Did you think that letter was by and large something of a figment of the imagination of Lee?
Mrs. Paine. It seemed to me that a goodly portion of it, the part upon which I could judge, was false.
Mr. Jenner. The third of the letters that your mother made available appears on page 16. It is dated October 27. I take it from the context of that letter, it was written by you on October 27, 1963?