Letters Dellen Millard wrote to Christina Noudga while in custody were read aloud Thursday at the murder trial of Millard and Mark Smich.

The two men have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in connection with the May 2013 death of Tim Bosma.

Jurors at the trial have previously heard that Smich told his girlfriend he had nothing to do with Bosma’s death, and Millard acted alone.

Thursday, Millard’s letters suggested a very different scenario.

“It was Mark who f---ed up a truck robbery, not me. And just because I helped clean up Mark’s mess doesn’t not mean I should also pay for it,” Millard said in one later, dated October 2013.

Several letters from Millard were read aloud in court Thursday.

In the first – dated July 25, 2013 – Millard thanked Noudga for giving him “a little scrap of paper with a paw print on it” from his dog.

“You really do know me better than anyone else. It’s the perfect gift in this place,” he wrote.

 At another point, Millard described his prison accommodations as “luxury.”

“They think this is punishment? I have clothing, pencil, paper and books,” he wrote.

In another letter, about a week later, Millard claimed that the case against him was “circumstantial and full of holes.”

By the time Millard wrote his sixth letter to Noudga, in late September, Millard was saying that the two of them “need to get our stories straight. I need to know what you’re willing to do.”

Earlier in the day Thursday, testimony revealed that Noudga was present for a third item connected to Bosma’s death being moved in the subsequent days.

She had previously admitted to helping Millard move the incinerator in which Bosma’s remains were allegedly burned,  from inside a barn to outside of it at Millard’s farm property in North Dumfries, and driving to Kleinburg with Millard to drop off the trailer in which Bosma’s truck was eventually found at his mother’s house.

On the stand Thursday, Noudga said that after leaving the farm, they stopped at the home of a friend of Millard’s, where Millard left a toolbox.

Jurors have previously heard that police seized a toolbox as part of their investigation, which contained traces of gunpowder but no actual firearm.

Noudga also denied knowing what was discussed during calls Millard made while the two of them were driving between these various properties.

When testimony turned to the day of Millard’s arrest, Noudga explained that she eventually called Smich to ask if he knew what had happened to Millard.

“He said something went wrong and I shouldn’t worry,” she said.

Noudga said that later that day, she showed up at Millard’s mother’s house, where she was repeatedly asked about the trailer. Eventually, they concluded that it could contain Bosma’s truck.

“We touched the trailer, and if it is in the trailer, we’ll get caught in this mess,” she recalled saying.

After that realization, Noudga said, she and Millard’s mother put on gloves and wiped the outside of the truck clean.

The trial continues Monday, with more testimony about the letters expected.