SKIP TO CONTENT

Killers of the Flower Moon: Chapters 22–26

In this true crime book, David Grann investigates the murders of members of Osage Nation in the 1920s.

Here are links to our lists for the book: Chapters 1–4, Chapters 5–7, Chapters 8–15, Chapters 16–21, Chapters 22–26
35 words 54 learners

Learn words with Flashcards and other activities

Full list of words from this list:

  1. exhume
    dig up for reburial or for medical investigation
    We have a few old mouth-to-mouth tales; we exhume from old trunks and boxes and drawers letters without salutation or signature, in which men and women who once lived and breathed are now merely initials or nicknames out of some now incomprehensible affection which sound to us like Sanskrit or Chocktaw...
  2. salutation
    word of greeting used to begin a letter
    We have a few old mouth-to-mouth tales; we exhume from old trunks and boxes and drawers letters without salutation or signature, in which men and women who once lived and breathed are now merely initials or nicknames out of some now incomprehensible affection which sound to us like Sanskrit or Chocktaw...
  3. attenuation
    a weakening in force or intensity
    ...we see dimly people, the people in whose living blood and seed we ourselves lay dormant and waiting, in this shadowy attenuation of time possessing now heroic proportions, performing their acts of simple passion and simple violence, impervious to time and inexplicable.
  4. impervious
    not admitting of passage or capable of being affected
    ...we see dimly people, the people in whose living blood and seed we ourselves lay dormant and waiting, in this shadowy attenuation of time possessing now heroic proportions, performing their acts of simple passion and simple violence, impervious to time and inexplicable.
  5. excise
    remove by cutting
    Like most Americans, when I was in school, I never read about the murders in any books; it was as if these crimes had been excised from history.
  6. encroach
    advance beyond the usual limit
    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.
  7. wholesale
    on a large scale without careful discrimination
    The Kansas City Times, in an editorial, said, “The parole of Ernest Burkhart from the Oklahoma state penitentiary recalls what was possibly the most remarkable murder case in the history of the Southwest—the wholesale slaying of Osage Indians for their oil headrights…"
  8. beset
    annoy continually or chronically
    The freeing of a principal in so cold-blooded a plot, after serving little more than a decade of a life sentence, seems to reveal one of the besetting weaknesses of the parole system.
  9. affluence
    abundant wealth
    Barred from returning to Oklahoma, he had initially gone to work on a sheep farm in New Mexico, earning $75 a month. A reporter noted at the time, “It will be a far cry from the days of affluence as the husband of an oil-rich Osage Indian woman.”
  10. epitaph
    an inscription in memory of a buried person
    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.”
  11. undulate
    move in a wavy pattern or with a rising and falling motion
    We seemed to be driving aimlessly, riding up and down over the undulating land, like a ship adrift in the waves.
  12. meander
    move or cause to move in a winding or curving course
    In the distance was a ravine and, at the bottom, a meandering creek.
  13. oblivion
    the state of being disregarded or forgotten
    Although still officially a town, it seemed on the verge of oblivion. Year by year, its population had shrunk; now it was fewer than fourteen hundred.
  14. coterie
    an exclusive circle of people with a common purpose
    Hale relied on others to do his bloodletting, but there was no evidence that Hale’s usual coterie of henchmen—including Bryan Burkhart, Asa Kirby, John Ramsey, and Kelsie Morrison—had trailed McBride to the nation’s capital or were with Vaughan on the train.
  15. embezzle
    appropriate fraudulently to one's own use
    But there was a man who’d embezzled money from Grandpa Vaughan’s estate after he died and whom Rosa then sued in civil court.
  16. mundane
    found in the ordinary course of events
    At first glance, the dispute, which began in 1923, seemed mundane.
  17. acquisitive
    eager to attain and possess material possessions
    Census records indicate that by 1910 he had moved to Pawhuska, apparently one of the legions of acquisitive, dreaming, desperate settlers.
  18. itinerant
    traveling from place to place to work
    A 1926 photograph shows him dressed in the same style as Hale, with a sharp suit and a hat—an itinerant farmer’s son transformed into a respectable businessman.
  19. fleece
    rip off; ask an unreasonable price
    Burt employed bizarre accounting methods in order to conceal his fleecing of the Osage.
  20. berth
    a bed on a ship or train; usually in tiers
    Partway through the story, it mentioned that Burt had boarded the train with Vaughan in Oklahoma City and was on the journey when Vaughan disappeared from his berth.
  21. buoyant
    characterized by liveliness and lightheartedness
    She explained that Hale had sent the letter from prison to a member of the tribe and that not long ago a descendant had donated it to the museum. As I read through the letter, I was struck by the buoyant tone.
  22. morass
    a soft wet area of low-lying land that sinks underfoot
    Because the Whitehorn case was officially unresolved, I expected the trails of evidence to disappear into a morass.
  23. bracing
    refreshing or invigorating
    In fact, the reports were bracing in their clarity. Based on leads from informants and from circumstantial evidence, the private detectives began to develop a crystalline theory of the crime.
  24. hypocritical
    professing feelings or virtues one does not have
    Then a man named J. J. Faulkner—whom an agent called an “unprincipled, hypocritical crook”—insinuated himself into Hattie’s life, evidently blackmailing her with information that she’d shared with him about her role in the murder.
  25. anomaly
    deviation from the normal or common order, form, or rule
    Yet, in hindsight, the fact that Hale appeared to have played no role in the Whitehorn plot was the very reason the killing was so important. Like the suspicious death of Red Corn’s grandfather, the plot against Whitehorn—and the failed plot against his widow—exposed the secret history of the Reign of Terror: the evil of Hale was not an anomaly.
  26. sovereignty
    government free from external control
    Citing the terms of the 1906 Allotment Act, the suit alleged that because the company had excavated limestone and other minerals while building the foundations for the turbines, it needed the Osage’s approval to continue operations. Otherwise, Enel was violating the Osage’s sovereignty over their underground reservation.
  27. commute
    exchange a penalty for a less severe one
    Middleton’s sentence was commuted to life. Then, after he had served only six and a half years, he was pardoned by the governor of Texas; Middleton had a girlfriend, and Lewis’s family believed that she had bribed authorities.
  28. underscore
    give extra weight to
    These cases underscored that the murders of the Osage for their headrights were not the result of a single conspiracy orchestrated by Hale.
  29. intercede
    act between parties with a view to reconciling differences
    In her case, the government official interceded, and she survived.
  30. consumption
    a lung disease involving progressive wasting of the body
    Other observers in Osage County noted that suspicious deaths were routinely, and falsely, attributed to “consumption,” “wasting illness,” or “causes unknown.”
  31. eminent
    having an illustrious reputation; respected
    Louis F. Burns, the eminent historian of the Osage, observed, “I don’t know of a single Osage family which didn’t lose at least one family member because of the headrights.”
  32. rescind
    cancel officially
    Tillie confided to her lawyer that she wanted to prevent Morrison from inheriting her estate and to rescind his guardianship of her children.
  33. inordinate
    beyond normal limits
    An Osage scholar once observed, “Walking through an Osage cemetery and seeing the gravestones that show the inordinate numbers of young people who died in the period is chilling.”
  34. judicious
    marked by the exercise of common sense in practical matters
    Marvin Stepson had the judicious air of someone who had spent his whole career serving the law.
  35. conspicuous
    obvious to the eye or mind
    He also managed, on behalf of Mollie’s family, the team of private eyes that conspicuously never cracked any of the cases.
Created on Mon May 11 17:06:21 EDT 2020 (updated Wed May 13 14:06:16 EDT 2020)

Sign up now (it’s free!)

Whether you’re a teacher or a learner, Vocabulary.com can put you or your class on the path to systematic vocabulary improvement.