When Willie Boy tries to claim Carlota as his partner, a confrontation erupts. In the chaos, a gun is fired and Carlota’s father is killed. Whether accident or fate, the result is the same: Willie Boy is suddenly marked as a murderer. Knowing there will be no mercy, the young couple flee into the vast Mojave Desert, hoping distance and wilderness might grant them freedom.
News of the killing spreads quickly among settlers and nearby towns. Authorities, pressured by outrage and sensational rumors, assemble a posse led by Sheriff Wilson. To the public, the story is simple—a dangerous fugitive must be captured. Yet beneath the surface, motives vary, and prejudice shapes the narrative faster than truth ever could.
As the chase stretches across miles of burning sand and rock, Willie Boy relies on his knowledge of the land and his physical stamina. Carlota struggles to keep up, worn down by thirst, fear, and the relentless sun. Their love, once hopeful, now becomes a shared fight for survival as the riders slowly close the distance.
In a cruel turn of fate, tragedy strikes during the pursuit. Amid confusion and panic, Carlota is shot by a member of the posse who mistakes her for Willie Boy. Her death shatters the very reason Willie had to keep running. Grief replaces hope, and the manhunt transforms from a desperate escape into a lonely march toward inevitability.
Devastated, Willie Boy continues deeper into the desert, at times outsmarting the men chasing him. He cripples their progress by targeting their horses rather than the riders themselves, revealing that even in despair he does not seek bloodshed. Sheriff Wilson, witnessing the cost of the hunt, begins to understand that the story presented to the world may be far from the truth.
In the end, the authorities choose legend over reality. A body is presented, a narrative is written, and the newspapers report that Willie Boy is dead. But the film suggests another possibility—one carried in oral histories—that he survived, living quietly and alone for years afterward. The myth satisfies the public, yet the real story lingers like footprints in the desert wind.