The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 47
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As the three rode back to the courthouse, they felt good about the girls going to learn about nursing. They felt good about getting to ride out together again too.
Jefferson had their warrants, since Judge Parker was already in court for the day.
“Eli, this big horse wants to run some, let’s get stretched out and make some miles. It sure does feel good to be out here again,” Duncan said.
They poked their horses up to a good hard gallop and let them run for miles before they pulled them back at the first creek they came to.
They followed the Arkansas, passing on by Fort Gibson in the distance, then spending the night near the river in a grassy plain where the horses could eat.
Late the next day, they came to the K-T railroad and while stopped on top of the roadbed, they looked both ways at the miles of endless rails that ran off into the distance as far as they could see.
“When we get up to Tulsey Town, show me the land you bought for our partner company, Eli,” Moses said.
“I wanted to ride out that way too; we’ll get us some hot food, then ride on. I know Iron Hammer will be proud to meet you.”
“I want to see that big house being built, that Duncan was talking about.”
“You need to pick a place for you ‘n Suh a house, Moses. We’ll all be up here one day, when we get this crazy, wild Territory cleaned up some.”
“I didn’t know you were gonna build me and Suh a house too, Eli. Won’t that cost too much?”
“Not that much, we’ll all live up here and raise herds of cows and herds of young’uns one day,” Eli laughed as they rode on north.
Their first stop in Tulsey was at the lumber mill near the river.
“Marshal Eli, you made it back,” Williams, the yard boss said as he walked into the small office near the entrance of the lumber yard.
“Yup, had a lot going on lately and took a while to get back. How’s my man doin over there across the river?”
“He’s coming right along, they’ve been hauling lumber over there by the wagon loads every day.”
“We still good after that first payment I made?”
“Still good, Marshal.”
“These are my friends, Deputy Moses Kidd and Marshal Duncan. We’ll be buildin’ them both a house out there later, when we get the other stuff built.
“Moses, you and Duncan just pick out what you want built and tell your main man, we’ll be sure he gets the lumber to do it with.”
After stopping to eat some cooked food, they crossed the Arkansas and rode to the break of the ridge to see the buildings going up faster than Eli had ever thought they would. They rode across the land for a long ways, but never saw Iron Hammer or his brothers.
“Moses, you can see some of our cows over there on that hill. I reckon the others are scattered back over the top of that ridge. You can see the house being built too; see that tall roof already framed up over there?” Eli pointed to the other side of the ridge where the house and two barns were already framed.
“Eli, this is some fine looking land you got here, sure is gonna be good to know we’ll have a place to set down one day.”
“Moses, this is our land, and you and Duncan will have a house here too,” Eli told him again.
“Eli, it’s just hard for me to get that part right, I never had anything I could call my own. Now I got a wife with a baby on the way and I’m a deputy U.S. Marshal and a partner in a cow ranch.”
“Moses, I know what you’re talkin’ about. I feel the same way but Eli says we’re all in it together,” Duncan told him.
From the top of the ridge, they looked toward the east and saw the long black trail of smoke huffing and puffing from the smoke stack of a southbound K-T locomotive.
“You fellers see that railroad track over there?” Eli asked as they all looked toward the fast moving train.
“Yeah Eli, what do you reckon they haul on them trains way down here?” Duncan asked as the train kept rumbling southward, finally breaking over the ridge and heading down the south slope even faster, with the whistle blowing loud as it neared the long railroad trestle across the Arkansas.
“I reckon they haul supplies from up in Missouri and Kansas down to all the towns. I bet they haul a lot of stuff for the army down for the forts too.
“That railroad marks our boundary on that side and it goes northeast at that same direction along the railroad for another five or six miles. I got in mind that one day we’ll build us a cow loading place over there next to that railroad. We’ll be shipping cows up to Kansas City to the slaughter houses from here.”
“Eli, you sure got some big plans. You reckon we’ll ever have enough cows to do all that?” Duncan asked.
“With Iron Hammer letting us graze on his lands and them cows eating grass from our land, we’ll have some fine cows in a year to three. Did you see all them bulls back there, there must have been at least ten or fifteen of them humping them cows. As fast as they could get off one, they were humping another one.”
“How long does it take a cow to have a calf, Eli?”
“When I was a kid, we had our old milk cow bred to the neighbor’s bull and it took nine months, or there about. Kinda like a woman.”
Duncan went to counting on his fingers.
“So you’re saying, we’ll start having a bunch of little cows running around out here by the first of August next year?”
“Yep, maybe the middle of August for sure. Then after a few years, we’ll sell off all these and have some more coming along.”
“Eli, you ever raised cows before? I mean more than an old milk cow?” Duncan asked wondering how he knew all about this cow business.
“No, but for a while I worked for a man that did and I watched him and how he did it. I overheard a man talkin about cows in Kansas City that time Rose and me come through there, and cows was selling for twenty cents a pound on the hoof. I figure the cows we been buyin’ are over five hundred pounds. That’s at least a hundred and ten dollars a cow,” Eli was talking and figuring in his head.
“Eli, sometimes you figure faster than I can think. If we sold a cow for a hundred and ten dollars and we had a thousand of them, we’d have a hundred and ten thousand dollars, ain’t that right?” Duncan asked.
“Yep, and they just keep right on making little cows too.”
“Eli, I never knew there was that much money in the world, and here we are talking about growing cows and making that in a few years,” Duncan said.
“We’re gonna make it too. All of us and Jefferson will live over here in a few years and stop all this lawman stuff. We’ll have us a bunch of kids and a bunch of land and a bunch of cows. We’ll sit up here on top of this hill and look down on the Arkansas and watch our cows get fat.”
“Eli, you sure can see a lot of big things when you look off across the land like you do. I never can see myself doing things like that. I sure am proud you let me be a friend. You just keep on seeing big things like that, and me and Duncan will watch your back while you make it all work out,” Moses spoke up.
Moses had been listening to Eli and Duncan talk and just wondered at all the stuff Eli was talking about. How did a man see all that, just by looking way off over yonder like he was, with his head cocked to one side?
As they rode back down the slope toward the river, they spotted Iron Hammer riding along the river, just as he looked up and saw them riding toward him.
“Iron Hammer, good to see you,” Eli spoke as they stopped their horses near one another.
“Always good to see Eli Crow. You come to look at house and barns?”
“Yes, we were close by and wanted to look again at the good grass and the many cows. Iron Hammer, I want you to meet Moses Kidd, part Cherokee and part black man. He is my friend, same as Duncan is.”
“Moses Kidd, good to meet a friend of Eli Crow. Duncan, you look some better than last time you came here with your head wrapped.”
“I feel some better too, Iron Hammer.”
“My brothers and I have moved most of the cows back north to the go-i pool. We saw buffalo wade in the black waters and soon the gu-ga-i die and stop sucking blood.”
“Iron Hammer, I figure the cows got them up there in the brush country. Do you reckon the black water will kill all of them?”
“Eli, we have seen some buffalo covered in gu-ga-i now have none. When we see this, we drove all the cows in the pools with black waters.”
“What is a gu-ga-i, Iron Hammer? I don’t reckon I know any Cherokee words.” Duncan wanted to know what they were talking about.
“The cows had lots of ticks on them, Duncan, they drove them into the go-i ponds where the slick black water comes from the ground,” Eli explained.
“I never heard of a pond where slick black water comes from the ground, you don’t reckon it’ll hurt them cows do you, Iron Hammer?” Duncan asked.
“Not hurt cow, we have seen buffalo wallow in the go-i ponds and have no more gu-ga-i.”
“Are there many of these ponds, Iron Hammer, or is there just one?” Eli asked.
“There are many on Eli’s land. There are many more on my people’s lands where the land has sunk down to make the ponds.”
“Good, then we will have cattle that are tick free; we’ll get more for them. I heard two men dickering about money when one man saw ticks on the cows he was buying,” Eli told them.
When they had parted and crossed the river, Duncan was still thinking about the ponds with black water on top of them.
“Eli, what is that stuff Iron Hammer called go-i anyway?”
“It’s like axle grease, only not as thick, and it floats on water and it’s black as coal.”
“I remember seeing two of them pools like that. They were over west of here, maybe a little south of where we crossed on our way to Omega that time last year. One of’em was bubbling like it was cookin on a stove.”
“Duncan, is that over where the unassigned lands are that Jefferson was talking about?”
“It sure is, Eli. You reckon we need to see about getting some of that land for raising cows, so we’ll have a way to kill off the ticks before we sell the cows?”
“I was thinking that same way, Duncan. We’ll need some of these ponds when we buy more lands for raising our cow herds.”
“I saw some of them ponds before too, Eli, when I was with the cavalry. We even greased the horses’ legs to kill off any ticks,” Moses said.
“Eli, I never did hear the names of the outlaws we’re coming up here to get. Who was it and what all did this bunch of wild ass folks do?” Moses asked, after they’d ridden for another mile or so.
“I looked once, but let’s stop over here and take a good look at what we got.”
They stopped to relieve themselves and let the horses drink from a small stream. Eli pulled the three warrants from his saddlebags and opened them up.
“Looks like we got three men this time, one is Ed Burgoyne. Says he’s making whiskey and selling to the Indians. Another one is J.B. Hagar, says here he’s wanted for robbery, rape, killing a rancher, and horse thieving. The other man is Darnell Hutchins. Says here he’s wanted in Kansas and Arkansas too, for burning down barns and houses with people in them, after he’s robbed them.
“Says down here at the bottom that all three are suspected as stage coach and train robbers up in Kansas too.”
“It sure is some awful folks living out here. I’ll be glad when we get them all rounded up and took back to stand before Judge Parker. He’ll either send them straight to prison or hang them dead,” Duncan said.
“I reckon until we get this place made into a real state and have towns with lawmen in them, we’ll always have the outlaws, crooks, and rapers hiding down here in the Territory.”
“I suppose you’re right, Eli, some folks just ain’t gonna do right, no matter what we do out here. We’ll just have to kill some of’em off to get shed of them,” Moses agreed.
“Duncan, looks like on my map, we’ll be headed up just south of Arkansas City, where me and you first hooked up a few years ago. The three men were said to be holed up out near the Ponca Indian lands.”
“Eli, we’re just making all kinds of tracks back and forth across this Territory, ain’t we?”
“We sure are. Looks like we’ll be another day and a half getting over there, we might as well make camp up here by this creek where it cuts back away from the Arkansas.”
The Territory was becoming rougher, with deeper gullies and higher hills. Some places were barely passable as they searched for ways up and down some of the steep, brush and tree covered hills. They camped by a small creek, where it fed into the Arkansas, building a fire for one of the rare times.
They still had some of the food the women had packed for them on this trip and Duncan had put a pan in his bedroll to boil coffee in. He dipped some of the cool clear water from the fast moving creek and placed it over the fire as they unpacked their chicken and biscuits.
“Eli, I was thinking about you and Jefferson telling me about that eatin’ place there in Little Rock. Did you and him ever do any more about that?”
“He told me he’d found a diner car that was in fair condition. Said it had been in a derailment a few years back and messed up the wheels under it. He’s seeing how much we can buy it for and if we can get it moved from the train yards over to near the courthouse.”
“If that don’t beat all. Who’ll you get to run it, if you can get that thing moved and set back up?”
“I thought of Lorene and Corrine running it. I even thought of Jon David being the waiter boy, like that one in Little Rock I saw. He’d make a good one, the way he likes to talk to strangers and friends alike. That boy don’t ever meet a man that he can’t find something to talk to him about.”
“I heard you there. He’s sure a good kid too. How old is that boy now?”
“I think he’s about twelve, don’t know that I ever heard them say for sure,” Eli said.
“His momma sure done a good job teaching him manners,” Moses said.
“She sure did, he can read as good as Jefferson too. I heard him reading to the older girls the other day and he was even teaching them words when he let them read,” Duncan told them.
“I learned to read and write a little bit, but that was about all the learning I ever had. I kinda wish sometimes I knew more, but I reckon as long as I can make an honest livin’ and sign my name, I’m better off than some,” Moses told them.
“All three of us are like that, Moses. I don’t know that the women would love us more if we were schooled as well as Jefferson and Judge Parker. I mean, we can do good enough to buy horses and land and build more houses and buy cow herds. What more would a man be able to do, other than talk fancy. Then folks would look at us kinda funny if we was out here in the territory, talking all fancy when we was about to whup a man’s ass or about to arrest him, one or the other,” Eli stated.
“Eli, you may not be as well educated as men in high places, but you’re about the smartest man I ever seen at figuring things out and making things work so we can all have the best,” Duncan said.
“I got that from my Pa, I reckon. We never had anything, but it felt like we had everything, you know what I mean?”
“Yeah, I reckon. But I never even had that much. I always thought that was the way it was supposed to be for pore folks. I’m kinda like you said, Eli, I feel like I got about all I need, ‘specially now, since we’ve all hooked up together and making it together like we are,” Duncan told them.
They stopped talking and ate their warmed up chicken and biscuits and drank all of the boiled coffee, always careful not to pour it in their cups too fast, so they didn’t get a bunch of dregs. Duncan boiled another pan full and they drank another cup apiece before they stretched out in their bedrolls.
“I gotta tell you both now, this is what I was meant to be doin’ and I’m just as happy out here as I can be. I mean, I love that little Juni Mae more’n I ever thought I could love a girl, and that little old boy of mine just makes me feel so good when I look at him. But being out here, and gettin’ paid to do this, is about as good as it can get for a man,” Duncan said as he stretched out and lay back on his saddle.
“I reckon you’re right, Duncan. Marshal Dal Hopkins over in Boones Crossing, Kansas, told me I ought to be a U.S. Marshal one day. He saw me bein’ one before I did, and I took him at his word. I don’t know what else I’d be fit for, if I wasn’t a U.S. Marshal,” Eli confessed to his friends.
“I never even thought of bein’ anything like this, until you two walked into that little old mud and stick hut they had me livin in over at Fort Supply. Eli, when I saw you standing there; tall, part Cherokee, wearing that badge, I wanted to be just like you. Then we got to talking and the next thing I knew, you’d paid my due bill and had me believing I could be like you.
“I wake up every day now, thinking how lucky can a man get to have a house full of friends like I got now,” Moses said, as he too stretched out, his head on his saddle, smiling up at the sky about how things had all of a sudden turned out in his life.
He thought of that little Indian girl, Suh, and how she seemed to be as happy as any woman in that house. He knew when his and her baby was born, he’d be just like Eli and Duncan, grinning all the time when they looked at the little ones.
The three fell asleep with their bellies full, smiles on their faces and thoughts of even better things ahead for all of them.
They were up early, anxious to get on over to the Ponca Indian Reservation. They had a job to do and they were proud to be serving Judge Parker, the Territory, and this big, wide open country as United States Marshals.
“Eli, does it say all these outlaws are hooked up together, or are we gonna have to chase them down separate?” Moses asked as they rode.
“Says here they’d been reported as being together, tradin whiskey to the Indians for women and making trips up to Kansas to rob and kill. Like I said, they’re wanted for stage coach robbing and even train robbing.”
There was no way to know when they had crossed from one reservation onto the next. They had stopped to relieve themselves and water their horses when they looked up to see three mounted Indians looking down on them from a tall rise above the river.
Eli waved, hoping to make friends with them, though he didn’t know which tribe they were from. When they all waved back, the marshals rode up the steep embankment to meet them and hopefully find out where they were exactly.
“I am Marshal Eli Crow, out of Fort Smith, Arkansas. This is my fellow marshals, Moses Kidd and Duncan. We’re looking for the land of the Poncas.”
“I am Little Buck, this is my two sons. You are now on Osage lands, you will ride to the west and north to find Ponca lands,” the elder man spoke, as he pointed, his arm outstretched, with a long weathered finger aiming to the northwest.
“Thank you, Little Buck. We were sent here by Judge Parker in Fort Smith to find three white men accused of making whiskey and taking women from the Indians, do you know of these men?”
“I know of Hagar and the man called Hutch. The other man I don’t know the name. They are maybe twenty of your miles that way, no more.”
The two young boys were talking to their father, then turned to look at Eli.
“They live in a house by the river. When the river turns back west for a few miles at the big bend, you will stray away from the river to the west and north. You will then come to the river again at short bend. There you will come upon them,” one of the young boys spoke.
“You will smell the fires cooking the corn, then you will know you are close,” the other youth spoke.
“We thank you for this, what can we give you in return?”
“Do you have coffee?” Little Buck asked and smiled.
“We sure do, you can have all we got,” Duncan said and rode up next to him and pulled his bag of ground coffee out and handed it to him.
“Marshal’s Crow, Duncan, and Kidd, you are welcome on Osage lands any time you come our way.”
“Thank you, Little Buck, if we ever come back this way, we’ll bring you more coffee,” Duncan told him and they all parted with a nod to each other.
“Eli, do you see all them bends of the river they were talking about?”
“I see them, the river makes a big loop back to the southwest, then cuts back hard to the northeast toward that short bend,” Eli said as he looked his maps over.
“How far you think we are from there? Little Buck said twenty miles.”
“I would say he’s about right, by looking at my maps.”
They made good time the rest of the day and camped east of the river, near the short bend of the river. They didn’t build a fire and they didn’t talk. The three young men slept, but it was a fitful sleep, knowing what the morning would bring.
They were all awake before daylight, their horses saddled. They wanted to be at the sod hut early, to try and catch the men still asleep.
When sunup came, they were sitting at the front door of the stinking sod hut. Moses had cut all their trip lines around the perimeter and killed their dog before the light of day. There was a chimney pipe on the back side; a smoke plume was drifting lazily up into the still, damp, morning air.
They looked toward the big trees behind the hut and saw the whiskey still. It was a big one, and it was cooking as if someone had stoked the fire during the night.
The smell of green wood burning filled the air, along with the sweet, tangy smell of fermenting corn being cooked to a mash. There were more than a dozen wooden barrels close by. There were four mules and two wagons back against the tree line, away from the still and mud hut.
There must have been three wagon loads of green wood stacked near the two cookers. The wood was cut from small trees, into three foot lengths. There were no smaller trees left even close to the camp, they’d all been harvested to cook whiskey, since green wood burns slower and keeps an even heat.
They weren’t sure how many were in the small, low sod hut, built with limbs, grass and sod on top for a slanted roof. There was only one doorway in front and one in back. Neither one had a door in it, just old army blankets hanging inside, covering the doorways.
They crouched and watched for another few minutes, then Eli motioned both of them to watch the doors as he ran quickly and quietly out to where the still was.
Taking a long green pole, he lifted the leg on one side of a big cooker and kicked a stone out from under it. When he let the pole fall to the ground, the cooker tilted over on its side, loosening the copper top and spilling all the steaming, stinking, fermented sour mash all over the ground. There must have been fifty gallons of the mixture, already smelling of grain alcohol.
There was another pot, even larger than the cooker, connected to the top of the first pot with copper pipes. It too was resting on three large flat stones, one placed under each of the three legs. Eli had seen stills before, back home in southern Missouri. He knew the workings of them; this was the one that contained the pure grain alcohol that would be cut with water and sold to the Indians.
Taking the same long green pole, he lifted the pot and kicked the stone from under a leg. He slowly lowered the pole and watched as the strong, clear, foul smelling liquid ran across the slope, toward the mud hut. He put his hands on the top of one of the wooden barrels and pushed, it was full. Eli tested three more barrels and they were all full.
With his knife, he pried the wooden plug from the hole in the top of one barrel and put his nose to the open hole. The strong alcohol smell was enough to make him stagger backwards. With the hole on the downhill side, toward the mud hut, Eli pushed the barrel over slowly until it came to rest on a small, raised side of the platform where the barrels rested.
The strong, pungent grain alcohol was glugging from the hole, running across the dry slope toward the door of the mud hut, making another wet trail beside the one from the cooking pot. Suddenly, there was a whoosh from inside the hut and the blanket was blown from the doorway, and was laying on the ground, burning.
Eli ran as fast as he could toward the side where Moses knelt, watching. He was halfway to Moses when the fire raced across the ground, following the trail of alcohol until it came to the barrel he’d opened. There was no explosion, just a spray of fire into the air, when the barrels burned through and more alcohol came out.
The second barrel burst into flames, igniting the platform, and the other barrels. Grain alcohol was running all under the platform. The whole whiskey still was afire.
Eli stood with Moses as they watched the fire grow higher and hotter. The alcohol was pouring into the mud hut and there was fire coming from both doorways. They heard screaming and yelling as the whole roof caught fire and burned, falling through in minutes. The screaming and yelling stopped and Duncan walked over to where they were as they stood watching the place burn down to a smoldering, stinking pile of sod blocks and ashes.
Moses brought their horses up and tied them off to the side, away from the fire and the alcohol that was still running from the barrels as they burned through and spilled the contents on the ground.
“Ooooeee, Eli, did you know all that was gonna happen when you started turning them big pots over?” Duncan asked.
“No, I never even thought it was gonna run all the way down to the cabin. I kinda wanted to take them outlaws back to Fort Smith with us.”
“I don’t think Judge Parker would want us to bring them back now, do you?” Moses asked as they walked over to see some burned skeletons in the smoking stench of the ashes.
“I reckon not, Moses. We’ll need to bury them when the fire dies out enough to dig them out. I kinda hate to think of a human bone laying here to get gnawed on by an animal. Even if they was thievin’, rapin’ outlaws selling whiskey to the Indians.”
“Do you reckon they were all in there, Eli?”
“I just don’t know, Duncan. I really wanted to have a talk with them, but it just didn’t come out that way.”
When the fires had burned to a smoldering pile of ashes, they took their blankets from their bedrolls and cut off a corner big enough to tie over their faces and cover their noses.
With a long green pole each, they began poking and prodding their way through the ashes. When they had figured out how the beds were laying on the floor, they found the remains of three bodies. The stench of burning, blackened flesh was enough to gag them, but they kept at it, walking out to the water’s edge now and then to get a deep breath of fresh river air.
They took some shovels they’d found in back of the still and dug a deep hole to pile all the bones in. They wrapped their hands in parts of their blankets to handle the bones, satisfied they had them all in the grave. While Duncan and Moses covered the pile of bones, Eli took his pole and poked and prodded the floor of the hut, looking for a stash like he’d always found in these places.
Duncan and Moses were through and Eli was still looking for their hidey hole. He knew they had to have one and they’d want it close by when they slept.
Moses picked up a pole and walked over to help Eli. As soon as he stepped where the back corner of the hut had been, he went knee deep through a hole in the ground.
“Hot Damn Moses, you found it,” Duncan said as he walked over to help him.
“Help me outta this place, I can’t even touch bottom,” Moses said as he held his arm up. His left leg was still in the hole as he held himself up with the pole in his hands.
They pulled him out of the hole and raked all the ashes, burned grass, and sod back out of the way. The hole was big enough for a man to go down into when they opened it by pulling all the boards and mats of hides and blankets back.
When they had the hole cleaned out enough to see what all was down there, they saw three heavy made wooden crates stacked one on top of the other. Gripping the heavy rope handles on each end, Moses and Eli lifted the top one up and out of the hole. They carried it out away from the burnt ashes and the strongest stench before setting it on the ground.
It was nailed shut and Duncan took the shovel blade and jammed it under the lid. When he pried it open, they saw stacks and stacks of crisp new hundred dollar bills inside.
The three of them stood, looking down at the contents, then up at each other.
“HOT DAMN, would you just look at all that money? Do you reckon them other boxes are filled with money too, Eli?” Duncan said.
“We’ll soon find out I reckon,” he said as he and Moses walked back to the hole.
Duncan wiped the sides of the wooden crate off; he saw some writing burned into the wood.
“ATSF RAILROAD” it read in big letters.
When they had all three wooden crates pulled out of the hole and placed side by side, Duncan opened the other two. One had been opened and some money was gone, but it still had two full layers and over half of another layer, neatly stacked inside. The other one was still nailed shut. They opened it just to see that it was full, then hammered the lids back down with the back of the shovel blade.
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Fort Smith, Arkansas November 2, 1875 Before Duncan had completely recovered from the injury to his head, he was laid up with pneumonia. He’d gotten caught in a heavy downpour and arrived home wet and chilled. He spent two weeks recovering, with the first week spent in bed the whole time. Eli and Moses were split up again, since they were short-handed. “Eli, which way you headed this time? It looks like I’m headed up toward Kansas where you ‘n Duncan come from when he got whacked on his...
Oklahoma Territory Crow Ridge Cattle Company August 4, 1889 Jon David, Amanda, Sissy, and Analisa told Eli yesterday that they needed to be at the office early this morning. They let Chane and Jon Jr. spend the night with Shawn, Karly Jo, Clara, and Maryanne. Eli stepped out on the front porch earlier than usual that morning since he had all his Little Bucks here for the day. He drank the last of the coffee from his mug and stood looking down at the river before turning to look over toward...
Doctor Harrod came out just a few minutes after Eli and Jefferson walked into the lobby and sat down. They both jumped up as soon as he came through the door, hurrying to meet him. “Doc?” Eli said as he looked at the young doctor. “Duncan is fine. He’s sleeping now and you’ll both be able to see him in a few hours. I drained the wound where the injury had become infected. There was a bone fragment just as I thought. It was wedged in a clump of hair that had pushed into the tiny skull...
Indian Territory June 15, 1884: “Eli, look at all them dark clouds down yonder south of here. I sure hope we don’t run into any bad weather on the way home,” Duncan said as they rode on into the late afternoon after getting Joe patched up. “I’ve been watching them too, Duncan. I hope they’re between us and home, I’d hate to know our place was being hammered by storms.” By nightfall, the dark storm clouds had moved east of where they were heading, but the air was still damp and heavy like...
With the arraignments and hearings coming up for the criminals that Eli, Duncan and Moses had arrested in the past weeks, they were all required to be in the courthouse most of each day for a week. After that, they were told by Judge Parker they needed to be on call for another week as the prosecutors, lawyers, and public defenders obtained information from them. Though this was a rough two weeks for the three of them, who were used to being out in the open. They did enjoy their time at...
The next morning early, the three had ridden no more than half a mile from camp, when Eli pulled his horse back. “We got riders coming in, hold up and get your guns ready,” he told them. They were suddenly surrounded by sixteen members of a cavalry patrol, handguns drawn and hammers backed. “Stand your position men, United States Cavalry here. You’re trespassing on government property,” a big sergeant in front of the troop yelled. “Mister, you best put them pistols away before we shoot...
They left the courthouse and headed straight home to see the family. Duncan, Moses, and Eli could hardly wait to see their kids. Moses was extremely proud of his and Suh’s boy. They’d named him Pike Longfeather Kidd in honor of Moses’ father. Duncan and Eli’s young’uns were seven, and the two marshals could hardly wait to get home from a trip. Pike was about six months younger than the other boys, but he felt he could do anything the others could – the other boys expected as much of...
It took another hour to get from the high knoll over to the far side of Fayetteville, but they were at the old trading post at last. Eli helped both women to the ground. They were about frozen from being on the trail most of five days. He tied their horses to the hitching rail and rapped on the solid wood door. “ELI IS HERE,” he heard a scream and the door swung wide as Tin Yu, Catt and Eva ran out to him, nearly knocking him over backwards as they grabbed him in a hug, jumping up and...
The next morning, when Rose and Mary came down to the kitchen to start breakfast, Jefferson already had a warm fire built in the cookstove. As they filled the big coffee pot with coffee and water, they heard a noise on the back porch. Jefferson stepped to the back door to see the two nannies and the two kids on the porch, with the billy standing in the yard, looking up at them. Corinne and Lorene were next down the stairs, carrying the two babies, since they had taken it upon themselves to...
The three marshals rode for two more days, pushing their horses, keeping them fed and watered, as they made their way toward the Cherokee Outlet, known all over this part of Indian Territory as no man’s land. The third day on the trail after they’d met the cavalry patrol at the mouth of the Chikaskia where it emptied into the Salt Fork of the Arkansas, they met another patrol headed east. Abraham Walker was the scout. “Marshal Moses Kidd, you have made good time. Lieutenant Carpenter is...
The trip back to Fort Smith took three days longer than the trip over to the Panhandle. Twice along the way, Eli killed a small deer late in the day, so they could cook it all night and be gone at daylight, eating the cooked meat along the way. The rest of the time, they only stopped long enough to feed and water the horses and relieve themselves. The prisoners were left to their own devices, as for relieving themselves. While riding on the boards of the rough, bouncing wagon bed, they...
The travelers broke camp at daybreak after an early breakfast. They were still most of a day’s travel from Pecan Ridge and the MacEagle brothers wanted their new friends to visit the Cheyenne Village and meet their grandfather on the way. The Young Bucks and the Crow girls knew White Elk and they were excited about going to the Cheyenne village to meet with him again. They were even more excited to be there when he welcomed his grandsons home after they’d graduated from the private boarding...
Saturday, May 3, 1884 Cherokee Lands Indian Territory Iron Hammer’s Lodge “Eli Crow, I see you have returned and now you bring all the marshals and little Crows to see me. I see my own brothers, the Barkleys, with you. How am I so honored this day?” “Iron Hammer, I came with my friends and young’uns to tell you of a cattle deal we made in Kansas City this week. My little Crows have gifts for your little Hammers and me and my friends are always happy to sit with Iron Hammer and his brothers...
Tulsa, Indian Territory Crow Ridge Cattle Company June 2, 1884 The big house on the hill was full of happy talk as they gathered in the kitchen to talk and catch up on the latest trip into the Territory. Clarissa was typing on her typewriter as fast as she could to keep up with all that was said. She was getting faster at typing and this was the first time she didn’t make notes to type from later. They let the ten youngest travelers talk first, each of them telling their version of the...
A week after the marshals returned from their last trip, Eli rode across the river to Tulsa with Little Eli and the other boys and girls. The young’uns thought they were almost grown now, getting to ride the big high stepping horses all the way across the river with him and going to the post office at Perryman’s. He gave them enough money to buy some candy and even some gum, for the first time in their lives. The boys saw some baseball bats, gloves, and balls and each of them wanted baseball...
December 27, 1884 Tulsa Depot Tulsa, Indian Territory Jon David and Joe were at the train depot when the train pulled in from Kansas City. Jon David had gotten a telegraph message that there would be twenty-one, young Negro women aboard the train arriving on the twenty-seventh. There were only two Pullman cars and a caboose connected to that train. The preacher from the Negro church in Kansas City had made the trip down to Tulsa, escorting the young women personally, since the young women...
Indian Territory October 5, 1884: As the light of dawn began to spread across the plains, they harnessed the mules and hitched the teams to the wagons. They were all ready to meet the others at Pecan Ridge Cattle Company and start the pecan harvest. They saw how the nearby trees were loaded with pecans and knew this pecan crop was going to be a big one. Eli and Moses had been out before dawn, riding the western perimeter. Duncan and Joe had also been riding the eastern perimeter behind...
They did make that trip in September. Eli wanted the family to visit their hotel in Santa Fe then come back through Albuquerque on their week-long trip. They even made it down to Las Cruces to stay two nights at that hotel before heading back home. Eli knew the women would be having babies in the spring and he was already planning trips to Kansas City after the babies were born. In April of 1890, Eli took his Cherokee brothers, Iron Hammer, Iron Hand and Iron Eyes, with their families for a...
Tulsa, Indian Territory Sunday, July 28, 1889 While Moses, Isaac and Little Eli were loading the horses, the engineer yelled and waved to Eli again just as he stepped down from the Pullman carrying Little Eli’s traveling bag. “Marshal, if we’re gonna make a fast run down to Abilene like you want, the fireman will need some help from your bunch to keep up the steam,” he yelled above the noise of the locomotive. “We’ll ride up here with you. I want to keep this this thing red hot and smoking...
Miranda turned and sat sideways on the top rail as she watched Little Eli run over to get on his horse. Lee Yu, Lilly Beth, Kia, and Michi were all waiting for him. They all waved to her when they saw her looking. She felt like getting off the fence right then and grabbing Eli Crow. She was so in love with him and his family. No matter if it was right in the middle of the cattle pens, and right in front of all the men, she could have thrown him to the ground and loved him right here. They...
Across the small hotel dining room, there were three well-dressed men wearing tall white hats, drinking coffee and smoking fat cigars. One of them moved closer to sit at the table nearest the Young Bucks. “Excuse me please, but did I hear you say you have an exceptionally fast horse bred from Cheyenne horse blood?” The man asked from behind Eli. Eli turned to look back at the man, “Yes Sir, we sure do. He’s never been beaten in about thirty races,” he told the man. “We’re here to meet the...
After their meal, they rounded the young’uns up and headed them back upstairs. The elevator had to make two trips to get them all to the top floor. By the time they had the younger ones settled and into bed, it was after ten o’clock and they had a busy day planned for tomorrow. The baseball game started at one o’clock and they were scheduled to play two games before dark. The grownups talked for another hour before heading off to their separate rooms and to bed. They still wanted to spend...
“Trapper, there are at least two dozen turkey-buzzards circling overhead back west of here,” Micah told him as they rode north. Trapper and the others turned their horses to look back to where Micah was pointing. “Looks like we could have a fresh one for you men to check out. Let’s get on over there,” Trapper said and spanked his horse with his reins. They topped a small rise to see at least two dozen more buzzards on the ground tearing into a dead calf. When they rode up, the buzzards...
After their performance on their first assignment in Colorado back in October of 1896, the six Young Bucks’ names became well known at the Western District U.S. Marshal’s Service office in Kansas City. During the next two years they were called upon time and time again to settle disputes. They were sent to the Missouri border town of Fort Scott, Kansas, to help settle a railroad union dispute that had already gotten out of hand with clashes of violence by the time they arrived. With strong...
“We’ve never been up this way before, Daddy. Where are we going?” Little Eli asked. “We’re going up the Arkansas to the rough country where the Pawnee and Osage Tribes join lands. We’ll camp on the Arkansas and we’ll have our own school for you boys out here.” They had crossed the Arkansas River in a northwesterly direction, then followed along the west side of the river until mid-day. The boys were told to bring nothing but jerky in their grub bags, they were going to survive on what the...
Kansas City, Missouri July 21, 1889 Eli and Isaac were up and dressed, after washing up from a wild time the night before when they’d had champagne sprayed all over them and made love on the balcony. They were sitting out on the balcony again, looking down on the sprawling city below as people began to stir and fill the streets. The girls came out laughing and talking about the fun, crazy time they’d had last night. They were bathed, dressed and ready for a day of shopping and sightseeing...
Upon their return to Tulsa from racing Cheyenne at Vinita, Little Eli had met with Bill and Jack Robertson that day, asking them about making a lightweight saddle just for Cheyenne. After measuring and fitting him with the special built saddletree and pad, they made a saddle with no high pommel and no saddle horn. There were no fenders, just leather straps that supported the small brass stirrups. This saddle was half the weight of the working and pleasure saddles they used on the ranch. As...
October 1, 1881 While Eli was getting his latest prisoners turned over to the jailers, Jefferson left the courthouse through the back door and ran out to saddle his horse. He rode hard up the back way, cutting across an open lot and through someones yard as he raced home. He didn’t take time to put his horse in the barn, he knew Eli would see it anyway. He jerked the saddle off and turned his horse in the cow pen. When Eli rode into the yard later, it was almost sundown and there was no one...
When they arrived in Durant, the sun had been up a few hours and Eli herded them to the hotel. The fireman and engineer went with them as the local railroad workers filled the reservoirs with water and oiled the locomotive for them. This was the first chance Eli had for more than a few words with his Bucks since they’d boarded the caboose in Abilene. Eli and Moses sat across the table from them in the dining room and looked at each of them as they talked to their brothers and their...
“Kit, would you and Ruby want to wear buckskins like we do?” Caleb asked as they all talked, ate, and became friends. “We sure do. Marshal Eli told us we could, and said he’d even give us our own horse,” Kit answered. “We’ll have to round up our horses in the morning and see how many we have now. Daddy may have to get more horses from our friend, Iron Hammer. He’s the main man in the Cherokee Tribe that owns all the lands around us,” Little Eli said. “Momma told me we could all go down to...
Crow Ridge Cattle Company Tulsa, Indian Territory Thanksgiving Day November 27,1884: “Here come the Buffalo Soldiers, they’re crossing the river now!” Isaac yelled as he jumped off the back porch, headed toward the barn where the men, the girls, and the rest of the Bucks were gathered. The women had run the men and younger ones from the house so they could finish cooking and get the dinner ready. This was to be the biggest feast and biggest celebration they’d had to date. The men, the...
When they finished unloading the flatcar, they headed back to the house. Smitty, Leon, James, and Albert were on the wagon and Eli drove. “Smitty, I need to have a talk with you. Want to walk down to the river with me?” Eli asked. “Sure Eli, let me get a drink from the pump and I’ll be ready.” “I’ll meet you out front.” Eli went through the house and into the kitchen where the women were fixing supper. “Corinne, come go with me,” Eli said. “Eli, I’m not sure about this now. Can we wait...
After an early start in the cold hours of morning, they rode hard and steady all day, stopping to relieve themselves twice and eat from the grub sack. They made Kansas City, Missouri late in the day as the sun was sinking behind the cold flat horizon, across the river in Kansas. They stopped at a big fancy hotel and registered as Eli and Rose Crow. The desk man was hesitant at first to let the two Half-Breeds stay in his hotel, but saw the Deputy U.S. Marshal badge and the Indian Police...
“ELI! You’re back. Did you get the last one? Dal said you thought there was a woman with them too,” Sam Connor greeted his grandson when he came through the back door, stomping the mud off his feet. Eli was soaked, his buckskins wet and clinging to his body, his moccasins filled with mud and water. He hadn’t even put his long coat on when he left Young’s Store. The back of his coat was shot out anyway. “They’re all taken care of, Grandpa. How’s Grandma? She alright after all this?” He...
When they reached the river’s edge, Kit laid the fuses and caps on a stump. Ruby handed Kit a stick of dynamite and picked up a cap and a short fuse. Eli and the others watched as she inserted the end of a fuse into the open end of the blasting cap, then put her fingers about an inch from the end of the brass. She stuck this short end of the exposed brass into her mouth with the extra fuse trailing down her chin. They could see her straining her jaws as she bit down on the brass, clamping it...
Eli had planned their trip himself and since he wanted them to stay a few days in Boones Crossing without being in a rush, he decided to take his dad’s advice and travel to Kansas City first then come back to Boones Crossing. Though he and Isaac didn’t wear their guns, they did have their knives on their hips, with their guns packed in their traveling bags. Both were dressed in buckskins and their girls dressed in finery like the other women traveling on the train. They ate one meal in the...
Saturday October 3, 1896 Crow Valley, Oklahoma Territory “Let me see that map again, Deuce,” Ezra said. He stood next to Eli and Isaac as they looked at the map. They had just gotten their first orders as Deputy United States Marshals two days ago, and the six of them were excited as they saddled up. They’d packed the night before and already had their two packsaddles loaded with tents, food and supplies for at least a two-week stay once they reached their destination. They were being sent...
Dal Hopkins had been half asleep, half-awake as he worried about his town. He heard a man whisper something behind him in the cell. Was he dreaming? Could it really be? HE KNEW THAT VOICE... He’d know that voice in the middle of a windstorm on the plains or in a howling snowstorm on top of a mountain. No matter where on earth he was, he would know that voice... Eli was here. He knew it was him! How – he didn’t know, but that was Eli Crow behind him, he’d bet his life on it. “Marshal,...
Eli knew he had a battle on his hands convincing the mommas of his sons and daughters that his plan was the best way to keep the Bucks, the Crow girls and the rest of them from having babies and still let them spend time with their friends. He figured the best way to handle this was to get them all at once and get it over with. Miranda, Clarissa, Tin Yu, Catt, Eva, Rose, Sissy, Suh, Juni, and Grandma were gathered together out away from the others. Eli wanted all of them to listen to what he...
Boones Crossing, Kansas July 23, 1889 Little Eli, Kit, Ruby, and Isaac arrived in Boones Crossing early, making the short trip from Kansas City in only a matter of two hours. They had accompanied their friends to the train station the evening before and watched as they boarded the train to Colorado. This was a tearful parting of new friends with all of them vowing to meet again soon. The McInnis sisters especially took it hard, sobbing as they sat on the train and waved out the window to...
Crow Ridge September 1, 1896 “Come on in, Ezra. Your dad and I wanted to talk to you before you head back to Crow Valley,” Rose told her son. Jefferson was sitting up in bed with the covers pulled to his waist. “Dad, are you feeling any better?” Ezra asked as he walked over to sit at his bedside and lay his hand on top Jefferson’s right hand. “I feel better today, Son. This has actually been one of my better days in the past few months. “Dad, I suppose I’ve always taken for granted that...
When the Buffalo Soldiers rolled in from Little Tree with empty wagons, all of them jumped in and loaded them as quickly as possible. There were fifteen more loads to ship after they held back the last three loaded wagons to take to Tulsa. Willis turned fifteen of his men right back around, telling them to get on back so they could all head over to Tulsa and start learning to be oil well drillers. The next morning early, Eli and Jon David were sitting by the fire outside, drinking coffee...
Eli knew he had to get over to the women as soon as he could. He saw them laughing and talking with Analisa, pointing now and then toward where he stood. Even Sissy, Miranda, and Grandmother were huddled with the young Mexican woman, whispering and laughing. When Catt and Eva pulled her aside, they were laughing aloud and Eli knew it was time to go. “I see all of you have met Analisa. I hope you’ll make her welcome. I’ve asked her to work for us when we get back to Tulsa,” Eli told them when...
Two weeks earlier, when Duncan and Eli had split as they arrived in Tulsa, Duncan felt alone as he rode north toward Kansas. Though he’d been a deputy marshal for over two years when he met Eli, he’d grown to like hid friend so well that he missed his company and the friendship they shared together on their trips into the Territory. He rode into southern Kansas two days later, after riding late like he and Eli often did when they first met. He wanted to hurry and do his law business, then...
The men of Crow Ridge Cattle Company loaded the second trainload of cattle bound for Kansas City and knew there wasn’t time to load another fifteen cars before dark. The first trainload would have to make it to the next sidetrack, near the Kansas state line, before the two empty trains could travel on down to Tulsa. They made plans to start loading at daylight the next day. The empty trains would arrive during the night and have to lay over. They gathered around after the first day of...
The Waco Kid never raised his head as he reached out to pick up a stick and thrash it across the bedroll nearest him. “Get your asses up, we got a score to settle this morning and I’m ready to get started!” he said loudly. The other men began to stir in their bedrolls and The Waco Kid rolled over to sit up. He had yet to look up as he pulled his boots on, then picked up his two pistols and shoved them down in his holsters. He stretched his arms over his head, wincing at the pain in his ribs,...
Crow Ridge March 29, 1889 The family was up before dawn to see the Crow girls and the Young Bucks off. Even their younger brothers and sisters were up. Eli cornered Little Eli and Ezra as soon as they came downstairs and pulled them aside. “I need to give you men something. I’ve been wanting to tell you about this, but never felt like it was the right time until now. “Eli, back when you told me that you Bucks wanted to have a place of your own and still wanted it to be near each other, I...
Union Station Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania June 19, 1885 Eli had been on the train for four days when he arrived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. They had an hour layover there, one of many layovers they’d had on his long train ride from Indian Territory. After he’d found the toilets to relieve himself, he sat inside the huge train station and watched the hundreds of people coming and going. He’d never seen this many people in one place ever before, not even in Kansas City at the ballpark. He kept...
“This is absolutely beautiful. I just love the way the houses and barns look with all the pecan trees around,” Miranda said. “It does look good and shady back in them trees. We need to plant some pecan trees over at the other place to shade it a little, I reckon,” Eli agreed. “You boys get you some clean buckskins and go back behind the barn and get a bath,” Eli told the six boys. “Miranda, would you help Sissy get the girls back there and get them bathed?” “I will, but first we’re going...
There were snow flurries blowing in the wind, with a light blanket already covering the ground when the Bucks started out the next morning after saying their goodbyes to the family. They were dressed in their buckskins with their union suits underneath and heavy boiler overalls over their buckskins. Each had a leather fur-lined cap pulled down over their head and ears. They wore wool scarves backed with flannel over their faces, leaving only a slit with their eyes exposed as they rode...
Eli and Duncan headed out of town with their wagon load of prisoners. Bud Parkins drove the wagon, Duncan and Eli rode their horses. “Eli, I already like this horse pretty good. He’s as tall and long legged as that big stud you got.” “Yep, you got a good’un, Duncan.” They turned south at the creek crossing, and rode right by Noonan’s ranch. “You could at least let me see my wife before you take me back,” Noonan said. “I’ll go see if she wants to see you... “Duncan, you keep them headed...
“What can I do for you, Mister? You look to be part Indian. Are you?” The man behind the window at the train station said as Eli walked up to the window to send a telegraph message back to Little Tree. “I need to send a message over to Little Tree, Texas. Can you do that for me?” Eli said, ignoring the man’s remark. “I sure can. Who is it for and what name do you want on it?” “Put my name on it, Marshal Eli Crow. Send it to Hoke at the livery. Tell him I need him to get word to my folks at...
“Son, that was some race. We heard what Parkman’s jockey said. You did the right thing holding Cheyenne back, then letting him run away with the race after they’d tried to run him down like that. You’d think Sam Parkman would know better by now,” Eli said as he and Joe stood beside Little Eli when their picture was made. “Did you win big again, Dad?” Little Eli asked, knowing by his smile that he did. “We all won big on that race. I already have another big bet placed on the last race...