keg.”   Hale    had promised    to  pay an  extra   premium on  such    a   policy,
and the salesman    had responded,  “Well,  we  might   write   him for
$10,000.”
“No,    I   want    it  for $25,000,”   Hale    said.
The  salesman    had     told    Hale    that    because     he  wasn’t  Roan’s
relative,    he  could   become  his     beneficiary     only    if  he  were    his
creditor.   Hale    had said,   “Well,  he  owes    me  a   lot of  money,  he  owes
me  $10,000 or  $12,000.”
White   found   it  hard    to  believe that    this    debt    was real.   If  Roan
had really  owed    Hale    that    amount  of  money,  then    all Hale    would
have    had to  do  was present proof   of  the debt    to  Roan’s  wealthy
estate, which   would   have    reimbursed  him.    Hale    had no  need    to  get
an   insurance   policy  on  his     friend’s    life—a  policy  that    wouldn’t
have    a   significant return  unless  Roan,   who was then    in  his late
thirties,   suddenly    died.
The salesman,   who was close   to  Hale,   admitted    that    he  had no
proof   of  the debt    and that    he  had simply  desired his commission.
He  was yet another person  bound   up  in  the “Indian business.”
Roan     seemed  to  have    been    unaware     of  these   machinations;   he
trusted that    Hale,   his supposedly  closest friend, was helping him.
But there   remained    one impediment  to  Hale’s  scheme. A   doctor
had to  examine Roan—a  heavy   drinker who had once    wrecked his
car while   intoxicated—and deem    him a   safe    risk    for the insurance
company.    Though  one physician   said    that    nobody  would   approve
that    “drunken    Indian,”    Hale    shopped for doctors until   he  found   a
man  in  Pawhuska    willing     to  recommend   Roan;   one     of  the
seemingly   ubiquitous  Shoun   brothers,   James,  also    recommended
Roan.
White   discovered  that    the insurance   company had rejected    the
first    application.    A   company     representative  later   noted   dryly   of
Hale’s  effort  to  secure  a   $25,000 policy, “I  don’t   think   it  would
