New Mexico, 1887, a land in the   midst of the worst drought anyone can remember. Family histories and   loyalties run deep, but when rancher Tom Forrester has his access to the   Pecos River cut off by the son of his old partner, he convinces his   foreman, Shad Marone, to pay Jud Bowman back for the discourtesy. Yet   what starts as a simple act of petty revenge quickly spirals into a   cycle of violence that no one can control.
                     
                    Now Marone is on   the run, pursued by a sheriff’s posse across a rugged desert landscape.   Leading the chase is Jesus Lopez, a half-Mexican, half-Apache with a   personal stake in bringing Shad to justice. Newly released from jail,   trusted by no one, Lopez swears he’s the only man who can track Marone   down. That may be true. But who will live and who will die and what   price will be paid in suffering are open questions. Fate and the Jornada   del Muerto desert possess a harsh justice that is all their own.
                     
                    With a propulsive script from Beau L’Amour and Kathy Nolan, adapted by   Charles Santino and illustrated in bold black-and-white by Thomas   Yeates, Law of the Desert Born captures the dust and blood of   Louis L’Amour’s West—a world where the difference between a hero and a   villain can be as wide as the gap between an act of kindness or   brutality or as narrow as a misspoken word.