Over     several     weekends    each    June,   the     Osage   hold    their
ceremonial   dances,    I’n-Lon-Schka.   These   dances—which    take
place,  at  different   times,  in  Hominy, Pawhuska,   and Gray    Horse,
three   areas   where   the Osage   first   settled when    they    came    to  the
reservation,    in  the 1870s—help  preserve    fading  traditions  and bind
the community   together.   The Osage   come    from    all over    to  attend
the dances, which   provide a   chance  to  see old family  and friends
and cook    out and reminisce.  The historian   Burns   once    wrote,  “To
believe  that    the     Osages  survived    intact  from    their   ordeal  is  a
delusion    of  the mind.   What    has been    possible    to  salvage has been
saved   and is  dearer  to  our hearts  because it  survived.   What    is  gone
is  treasured   because it  was what    we  once    were.   We  gather  our past
and present into    the depths  of  our being   and face    tomorrow.   We
are still   Osage.  We  live    and we  reach   old age for our forefathers.”
During  a   subsequent  visit   to  the region, I   headed  to  Gray    Horse
to   see     the     dances  and     meet    one     of  the     people  Red     Corn    had
suggested   I   find—someone    who had been    profoundly  affected    by
the murders.    Almost  nothing remained    of  the original    Gray    Horse
settlement  but some    rotted  beams   and bricks  buried  in  the wild
grasses,    which   the wind    ruffled in  ghostly rhythms.
To  accommodate the dances, the Osage   had erected,    amid    the
encroaching  wilderness,     a   pavilion,   with    a   mushroom-shaped
metal    roof    and     a   circular    earth   floor   surrounded  by  concentric
rows    of  wooden  benches.    When    I   arrived on  a   Saturday    afternoon,
the  pavilion    was     crowded     with    people.     Gathered    in  the     center,
around  a   sacred  drum    used    to  commune with    Wah’Kon-Tah,    were
several male    musicians   and singers.    Ringed  around  them    were    the
“lady   singers,”   as  they    are called, and in  a   circle  farther out were
dozens  of  male    dancers,    young   and old,    wearing leggings,   brightly
colored ribbon  shirts, and bands   of  bells   below   their   knees;  each    of
these    dancers     had     on  a   headdress—typically     made    of  an  eagle
feather,    porcupine   quills, and a   deer    tail—which  stood   up  like    a
