As  we  drove   through Gray    Horse,  we  came    upon    a   clearing    in
the woods,  where   there   was an  old cemetery.   We  got out of  the car,
and  Margie  paused  in  front   of  a   tombstone   bearing     Mollie
Burkhart’s   name.   The     epitaph     said,   “She    was     a   kind    and
affectionate    wife    and a   fond    mother  and a   friend  to  all.”   Nearby
were     the     plots   for     Mollie’s    murdered    sisters     and     her     murdered
brother-in-law, Bill    Smith,  and her murdered    mother, Lizzie, and
her murdered    first   husband,    Henry   Roan.   Margie  looked  around  at
the tombs   and asked,  “What   kind    of  person  could   do  this?”
Margie  had earlier laid    flowers around  the graves, and she bent
down    and straightened    one.    “I  always  try to  decorate    the stones,”
she said.
We   resumed     driving     and     cut     along   a   dirt    road    through     the
prairie.     Lush    tall    grasses     spread  as  far     as  the     eye     could   see,    a
rolling  green   expanse     that    was     disturbed   only    by  a   few     small,
rusted   oil     pumps   and     by  cattle  grazing     here    and     there.  Earlier,
when    I   drove   to  Gray    Horse,  I’d been    startled    by  the sight   of  bison
roaming through the prairie with    their   bowed   heads   and massive
woolly  bodies  supported   seemingly   impossibly  on  narrow  legs.   In
the nineteenth  century,    bison   were    extinguished    from    the prairie,
but  in  recent  years   they    have    been    reintroduced    by
conservationists.   The media   mogul   Ted Turner  had been    raising
bison    on  a   forty-thousand-acre     ranch   between     Fairfax     and
Pawhuska—a  ranch   that    in  2016    was bought  by  the Osage   Nation.
