In your circuit you cannot go down with the power at the crystal when you want 100mW (my assumption, doublecheck what is allowed in your country) into the antenna, because the transistor at 7MHz needs some "input power" as well. The power gain at 7MHz could be say 10 of that transistor.
If you want lower crystal drive level you have to add a separate oscillator with a second transistor (low power), and the output of that oscillator you have to couple into the base of that "final" transistor (aka power amplifier "PA").
That is the proper way how to build a CW morse qrp 40m band transmitter. Single transistor ones do not work well and the people on the 40m band will soon get unhappy..
Btw., I would recommend you to find your local amateur radio club - go there, discuss, and then apply for the ham radio operator license..
Below a typical two transistor transmitter with some qualities (and people will copy you around the globe

).
For 40m (7MHz) you have to use different values of L and C.
You would need a ham operator license for it (its output power could be from say 1W to 8W based on settings and parts used), however..
PS: and the same for 40m band..