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“Willis, you and your men get things wrapped up here and go back that way now. All of you go down to Perryman’s, I’ll go on ahead and have us a separate account set up for all our supplies. We’ll get you outfitted with boiler overalls, gloves, and slickers, then make sure he orders more. We can’t be talking about drilling for oil though, or we’ll have people all over the place out here,” Jon David told them.

“Willis, when you and all the men get your rain suits, slickers, rain hats, and gloves together, you need to get your personal things set up at your bunkhouses too. We have a cook hired to cook two meals a day, one at each shift change. There’ll be one crew coming in and one leaving shortly after that. You men need to get a small lard bucket or something you can bring your dinner to work in. You’ll be eating one meal on the job. We can’t have men coming to work hungry or going to bed hungry,” Eli told him.

“Eli, you done gave each of us more money than ever we knew was in the whole world, now you gonna cook for us and buy our clothes?” Willis asked with a big grin.

“Willis, you and your men hear me now, you’ll earn every dime you get from Crow Ridge Oil Drilling Company. In a month’s time, from what Albert and the others have told me, you’ll be so tired and wore out, you’ll wish you was back on them old cavalry horses riding the unassigned lands again.”

“Eli, you been right about everything you ever told us up to now ... but this time you’re wrong. We already have it better than since the day we were born. Each of us have ten times more money already than we ever had all put together in our lives. Jon David told me this morning that him and his wife has done wrote some letters to the Negro churches in Kansas City and Little Rock asking for some young women of child bearing age to write and send pictures if they wanted to come out here and see about marrying up with us.

“He said in less than two week’s time, we’d be getting letters with pictures of all the women back there that wanted a man like us. He was showing me one of them letters where he told all about us; I couldn’t read but a few words of it, but he read it to me twice...

“I never knew this bunch of old raggedy-ass, wooly looking black men looked as good as Jon David told in that letter we did,” Willis said and they all laughed as they walked back to the wagons and horses that were tied to the hitching rail two hundred feet away from the drilling rig.

“Maybe we’ll strike oil before Christmas like Little Eli was hoping for. You and your men would have time to meet a woman if they came here at that time.”

“How would they get here? I figured if a woman needed a man that bad, she wouldn’t have the money to travel either.”

“If you pick one out, we’ll send her the money by telegraph. It won’t cost but maybe ten to fifteen dollars one way. If she gets here and she don’t like you, send her back and tell her she has to pay her own way.”

“That’s what Jon David put in them letters too. I wonder if we’ll even hear from one woman, Eli, let alone twenty seven.”

“You mean he wrote letters for the six white boys too? I didn’t know that.”

“He told me they asked him to. Them boys are all young enough to make good husbands and daddies if they’re a mind to. All the rest of us are getting on up close to forty years old, Eli.”

“You got a lot of good years left, Willis. When you get a young wife, she’ll have you some young’uns and that alone will make you feel young again. Just think, Willis, they’ll all be waiting for you when you get home from work. There’s nothing like the feeling of a man playing with his own babies when he gets home. All of you will have some acres and a house over there near Pecan Ridge in a few years and just look at what you’ll have to offer a woman and a family then.”

“Eli, I swear. You sure can paint some pretty pictures in my head, listenin’ to all you say. I just hope me and the others live to see half of what you talk about. We’ll be even more happy than we are now and we already feel like we’re livin’ in the clouds, we’re so happy.

“I almost got tears in my old eyes just now, when you talked about me coming home to a wife and kids. I never thought I’d ever live to see the day.”

“Jon David, what on earth are y’all doing with all of them black hired hands over there? It’s too cold to be plantin’ cotton,” Mrs. Perryman said when Jon David went over to set up an account for their labor.

“We’ve bought some tractors and mules and we’re plowing up a lot of that old rolling hill land back there. We’re thinking about planting cotton on some of it in the spring and some wheat next fall. We can’t get anything over on you, Mrs. Perryman.”

“Son, that was just a wild guess I had. I never really thought you’d be doing that. We all heard y’all were building up another big herd to sell up in Kansas City like the last one y’all had. We heard y’all shipped off over three hundred cattle car loads of cows last spring. Seems like word gets out quick when there’s talk of what’s happening over on Crow Ridge.”

“We are building another herd here on this ranch and Dad bought another big piece of land from some of his friends in the Chickasaw and Cheyenne Tribes. We’re putting more and more cattle down there now.”

“Lordy be, Jon David, if that don’t beat all. Them young’uns come in the other day and sold us a wagonload of pecans and told us they come from down there. They said y’all sent forty boxcar loads at fifty thousand pounds a load, to New York City. I reckon Marshal Eli is gonna get out of the law business now that he’s into pecans and cattle, and already gettin’ into cotton farming like he is in a big way.”

“He and I have talked about that too. I’m not real sure he’s ready to give up his badge just yet though.”

“Jon David, if he’s talking about it, he’s thinking about it. With Tulsa growing like it is and new people coming here all the time, it won’t be long until we’ll have a town marshal and some sheriffs over here like in other places. Somebody said one day here in the store that we already have almost three hundred people living in this town now. We might not need all them marshals you got livin’ over yonder at your place then. He oughta think it over good, they might not even need him no more.”

“You may be right, Mrs. Perryman. But if I know my Dad, he’ll hang onto it a few more years anyway.”

“Just a few more years, huh? Well, I’d sure hate to see him not be a marshal anymore. He’s sure been a good one and hauled some bad folks away from this little river town in the past ten years or so, I’m here to tell you.”

A tall man in dirty overalls spoke up after listening to their conversation. “I’ll tell you some folks he best be hauling from around here. Marshal or no marshal, we don’t like niggers in Tulsa!”

“Mister, I don’t know who you are, but if you want to meet Marshal Crow personally, just keep up that sort of talk around here. These black men we’ve hired are his personal friends who just happened to have been in the United States Cavalry until about two months ago. They were Buffalo Soldiers, I know you’ve heard of them,” Jon David told the man.

“I don’t give a damn if they were ridin’ buffaloes and chasin’ soldiers, we don’t need none of ‘em around here. Next thing you know, they’ll be bringing in women and all of’em will have a house full of little black pickaninnies runnin all over the place like it was back down south where I come from...

...”What are you gonna do then, Mrs. Perryman? When you have a herd of them damn nigger pickaninnies come runnin’ in your store? You gonna wait on ‘em or tell’em to leave?”

“I’ve already waited on those Negro men just a while ago and they’re some nice men with a lot more manners than some folks I know around here. They told me they were working for Marshal Crow and his family. If you’re not careful, Marshal Crow will be lookin’ you up for tryin to get up in the middle of his business,” Mrs. Perryman told the man as she shook her finger at him – red in the face.

“I’m not scared of no God Damned Indian, no matter if he is a marshal.”

“This is his son you’re standing in front of, Turk, and we all know how Marshal Crow feels about his family. I suggest you leave now,” Mr. Perryman said as he walked over.

“I’ll leave, but I’ll tell everyone I know that you folks are sympathizers with them niggers that Marshal Crow’s done brung in here. You may just get a visit from some fellers wearin’ pillowcase hats if’n you’re not careful.”

“If you’re threatening us with the Ku Klux Klan, you can just leave this minute and never come back,” Perryman said, pointing to the door as the other men in the trading post looked over to where the loud conversation was taking place.

The six Young Bucks had walked into the trading post about the time talk got loud between Jon David and the tall man. The Bucks moved apart as the man turned to stomp out the door, mumbling something about all the fuckin’ niggers and Indians to himself as he left.

The Bucks turned and walked back out on the front porch, then walked over to sit on the edge of the porch as the man got on an old mule and rode south out of town.

“Do you know him?” Caleb turned his head and looked at Eli.

“Nope, never saw him before. Any of you know him?”

“I’m not sure, but I think he may be part of that family of older boys we ran out of town not long ago,” Micah said.

“Micah, you really think so?” Isaac asked.

“I’ve seen him talking to them before, like they were together. He sort of resembles the oldest one a lot, the one Eli whacked upside the head with that shovel handle.”

“He does kind of resemble that one. We may need to take a closer look at him,” Eli said. They looked toward the man one more time as he turned his mule west.

“I say we take a ride,” Ezra said, spitting on the ground between his feet, his eyes pulled down tight, not even looking at his brothers.

“We got an hour before we need to head back. I say we ride out of town a ways and look things over too. We haven’t been out that way in a long time,” Micah said as they all stood and stretched, before bending to step under the hitching rail and mount up.

“Where you Bucks headed?” Jon David asked as he walked out of the trading post behind them.

“We were just about to ride out of town and circle back over to see if Smitty’s back at his shop. We’ll be back home in an hour or so, in time for class,” Eli said.

“See you Bucks back at the house,” Jon David told them and left.

The six boys turned their horses between two buildings and headed west. As soon as they were behind the buildings, they turned back to the right and rode through the trees for over a quarter of a mile. They jumped to the ground, tying their horses up, running for over a hundred yards as hard as they could.

They were squatted down in a growth of young cedar trees near the wagon road when the man rode his mule up to the old dilapidated shack and got off. Four young men came around the run-down shack and met him at the porch.

They were the same ones who had been rude to the woman and her girls in front of Perryman’s. Micah pointed toward the men and the Bucks looked from one to the other and nodded in agreement.

“Where ya been, Pa? We been lookin for ya.” The oldest asked. He wore a wool knit cap pulled down over his ears, but the Bucks already knew he was the one who lost one ear to the hickory shovel handle.

“Been down to Perryman’s to see if I could find out if it was true about that damned Indian Marshal bringing them niggers in here. It’s true alright, I saw that lawyer son of his in there. He was makin’ it good with the Perryman’s for them black men to buy stuff there on his account.”

“We don’t like them niggers about as much as we don’t like them Indians, do we Pa?” The youngest said.

“Hell naw we don’t, and we aim to do something about it too. Ain’t none of them fools back there got sense enough to see what’s fixin’ to happen around here. If them damn sorry-ass niggers get set up here with these damn lazy-ass Indians, we’ll be saddled with all their sorry, lazy asses the rest of our lives.”

“You got anything in mind for handlin’ that bunch before they get settled in around here?”

“I reckon I got a few things in mind, I just don’t want to talk about ‘em right now. I’ll get with your uncle Soapy in the mornin’ and we’ll come up with somethin’ for sure.”

“He’s been laid up drunk for a week now, Pa. He may not even know you’re there.”

“That’s just like that sorry-ass brother of mine. Hell, he’s as bad as them lazy-ass niggers and Indians, if you ask me. Did you boys get that batch of corn liquor poured up in them stone jugs, like I told you?”

“We got some of it, Pa, but we forgot to cut it like you told us. We got to go back and cut them first six jugs in half, then we’ll pour the rest of that batch up.”

“Go get it done then and don’t be lettin’ Soapy have no more. Hell, he’s gonna kill his damn self if he keeps on drinkin’ that shit straight the way he does.”

John David caught up with Eli and the others at the barn and told them about the conversation with the Perryman’s and the man known as Turk. He wanted them to know, before the Buffalo Soldiers went back over there and became involved in something for no reason of their own.

“I don’t reckon I know of a man called Turk. What does he look like?” Eli said.

“Eli, he’s the one they all call Turkey ... you know him, we all do,” Duncan told him.

“Turkey said all that about the men we’ve hired to work here? Hell, he’s never worked a day since we started coming through here ten years ago, Duncan.”

“I know, Eli. Wonder why he’s so set on causin’ trouble for them men just ‘cause they’re black. Hell fire, the first job I ever had, I was nine years old and working for a black man and his wife on a little old spread back in Arkansas. They were the hardest working folks I ever saw too.”

“It’s just that some men look at the black man as if he’s still a slave and doesn’t deserve what the whites have, even if he works for it,” Jon David said.

“Jon David, I reckon that makes sense for the black man and the Indian too. You reckon that will ever change, or will we always have to fight that battle just to be free to make a living and work for a better life? The way I see it, if a man is willing to work and make something of himself, ain’t no one else got a say in it,” Eli said.

“Dad, I’d like to think it will change one day, but right now, it’s too fresh on people’s minds and some just want to be above others, no matter who they are.”

“I reckon you’re right. We run up on it all the time out here, and no matter how hard we try to overlook it, some just won’t let it rest.

“Moses, I know we’ve talked about this before and you being part black and part Indian too, you must’ve seen more of this than I have. I don’t know how you keep a cool head when you see this. I get so mad sometimes I have to make myself walk away to keep from killing a man.”

“Eli, most of my life it’s just been me when that stuff started and I knew I couldn’t whup the world. I didn’t want to die just yet, so I took a lot of it and went on. There was a few times I did let it get to me though and one time I got my butt whupped bad when three men jumped on me, after another one started cussin’ me and I waylaid him. I’ve had my good times though and whupped a few men ‘cause they cussed me and called me names. I reckon that was as good a feeling as I ever had, until I met you and Duncan. After I got to know the two of you, I knew that as long as we were together, no man would walk on us or cuss us again just because of who we are.”

“Jon David, for now just tell the men, and the white boys too, that we’ll have the Bucks go to the store for them and do their buying, since they’ll be too busy starting tomorrow anyway.”

“That may be best for now, Dad. Maybe when we become a state, more good people will come here and we’ll be able to put the hate and prejudice behind us.”

“We need to find that whiskey still and fix them good,” Little Eli whispered as they hunkered down near the old cabin and listened.

“We’ll have to come back one night after dark. Right now, we better get our butts across that river or we’ll be fixed good. We got classes in just a few minutes,” Ezra said.

“Let’s go Bucks, we’ll find that whiskey still later, then come back and make sure there’s nothing left of it,” Caleb told his brothers as they hurried back to their horses.

The six of them ran into the school room just as their sisters and the Cherokee girls and boys were sitting down. The Bucks were grinning and the sisters knew they had been up to something, or were planning something!

Tulsa, Indian Territory Crow Ridge Cattle Company Crow Ridge Oil Drilling Rig # 1 The Mary Connor Crow November 28, 1884

Eli had told the Barkley brothers to hitch up five teams this morning. The whole family was riding over to see the drilling of the first oil well start up. With Tin Yu’s help, Lee Yu and Lilly Beth had painted a big board sign to hang on the railing:

Crow Oil Drilling Rig # 1 The Mary Connor Crow Started Drilling 11-28-84 Struck Oil 12--84

They were going to fill in the date as soon as the well struck oil. The whole family knew this would happen. They just knew it would.

Before they reached the drilling site, they could look across the open range and see the lights of two dozen coal oil storm lanterns burning brightly in the dark.

“It looks like Christmas from here,” Lilly Beth said as they huddled in the wagons, wrapped in coats and blankets.

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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 101

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 31

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...

1 year ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 76

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 27

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 110

“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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 111

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 37

“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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 98

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...

1 year ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 69

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 18

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 102

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 36

“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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 42

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...

1 year ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 33

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 5

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 62

“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...

1 year ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 34

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...

4 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 97

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...

1 year ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 109

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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 56

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,...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 84

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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 99

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 108

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 41

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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 92

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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 12

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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 29

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 71

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,...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 73

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 53

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...

4 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 30

“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...

3 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 48

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 13

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...

2 years ago
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The Legend of Eli CrowChapter 89

“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...

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