During  his time    as  a   Ranger, Tom investigated    several murders.
Tom’s    brother     Doc     recalled,   “We     had     nothing—not     even
fingerprints.    We  had     to  use     mostly  witnesses,  and     they    were
sometimes    hard    to  come    by.”    Even    more    troublesome,    some
Rangers had no  patience    for the niceties    of  the law.    One member
of  Tom’s   company would   seek    out the most    ruthless    bad man in
town    and then    provoke a   fight,  so  he  could   kill    him.    Tom,    who
believed    that    a   lawman  could   usually “avoid  killing if  you didn’t
lose    your    head,”  later   told    a   writer  that    he  had heated  discussions
with    this    Ranger. It  didn’t  seem    right   for any man to  play    judge,
jury,   and executioner.
In  1908,   while   Tom was stationed   in  Weatherford,    a   town    east
of  Abilene,    he  met a   young   woman   named   Bessie  Patterson.  She
was petite, at  least   beside  him,    and she had short   brown   hair    and
sincere eyes.   Tom,    who’d   spent   much    of  his life    in  male    company,
was taken   with    her.    Where   he  was a   man of  stillness,  she was
outspoken   and a   whirl   of  motion. She ordered him around  in  a
way that    few dared,  but he  didn’t  seem    to  mind;   for once,   it  was
not incumbent   upon    him to  be  in  command of  the world   around
him or  the emotions    inside  him.    His job,    however,    was ill-suited
for  marriage.   Doc’s   captain     once    said,   “An     officer     who     hunts
desperate   criminals   has no  business    having  a   wife    and family.”
Before  long,   Tom was tugged  away    from    her.    With    N.  P.  Thomas,
a   Ranger  who was one of  his closest friends,    he  was sent    to  deal
with    a   plague  of  rascality   in  Amarillo,   in  the Texas   Panhandle.  A
Ranger   reported    that    the     city    had     some    of  the     hardest     crooks
around  and that    the sheriff’s   office  had provided    no  assistance  in
removing    them;   what’s  more,   the Ranger  noted,  “the    Sheriff has
two sons    who live    at  the whore   house.”
Thomas  had already had several run-ins with    the deputy  sheriff,