The gang of misfits burned his farm and killed his wife and baby. Then they made a mistake. They did not kill him. He retreats into the wilderness of desert and mountains where he talks with his Apache grandfather and recalls his German father and Apache mother. After a year in the wilds, honing his skills with gun and knife, he's back. Nina, his first love, is shocked to see him in town. No longer the farmer in ragged overalls, he's wearing black leather and twin .44s slung low on narrow hips. He's riding a great white stallion and there's death in his eyes. The only way the gang can stop him is to killo him. The six of them against him in a final, guns-out showdown, they figure it will be easy...
The final confrontation in most western novels fails to do justice to the preceding drama. Not so in Thomas Hart's novel. The finale is an extraordinary scene of one man's determination to defeat overwhelming odds, to bring justice to a lawless land. Can he do it?