Three joining fragments of a letter. Little can be gleaned from the content. The somewhat "old-fashioned" hand is of palaeographical interest, especially the form of r.
. . . . . .
traces
]. saluto et indico [
] audientibus cum p[
sc]ripseras pa.[
] superi uis[
].uismiterdi.[
. . . . . .
cum p[: alternatively perhaps comp[.
There seems to be more than superius (which would be more likely to be the adverb than the rare gentilicium); superi might be the genitive of the cognomen Super (cf. [213].1, [255].i.1).