The open    prairie north   of  Pawhuska Credit 74In   December    1926,   Peace   suspected   that    his     wife,   who     was
white,  was poisoning   him.    As  the documents   confirmed,  he  went
to  see the attorney    Comstock,   whom    Webb    described   as  one of  the
few  decent  white   attorneys   at  the     time.   Peace   wanted  to  get     a
divorce and change  his will    to  disinherit  his wife.   A   witness later
testified   that    Peace   had claimed his wife    was feeding him “some
kind    of  poison, that    she was killing him.”
When     I   asked   Webb    how     her     grandfather     might   have    been
poisoned,   she said,   “There  were    these   doctors.    They    were    brothers.
My  mother  said    that    everyone    knew    that’s  where   people  would   get
the dope    to  poison  the Osage.”
“What   was their   name?”  I   asked.
“The    Shouns.”
I    remembered  the     Shouns.     They    were    the     doctors     who     had
claimed  that    the     bullet  that    had     killed  Anna    Brown   had
disappeared.     The     doctors     who     had     initially   concealed   that    Bill
Smith   had given   a   last    statement   incriminating   Hale    and who had
