In the Johnstone's The Backstabbers (Pinnacle 2020), Book 2 in the Red Ryan Western series, Red Ryan and Patrick "Buttons" Muldoon are on a stagecoach run for the Abe Patterson & Son Stage and Express Company to pick up a customer in a small town. They do this sort of thing occasionally to add to their company’s revenue but this time, when they show up at the assigned location, the town is deserted. Almost. After much searching, they find a man who leads them to their passenger--which turns out to be a coffin. They will be paid an exorbitant fee to take the coffin to a distant ranch. Then, they get their money and leave. Trouble is, outlaws try to steal the coffin on the way and are only prevented from doing so by a female shootist who is aggressive, a great shot, and arrives in the nick of time. She leads them to the ranch--operated entirely by women--and they are asked (for a bigger fee) to now take the ranch owner to another distant location.
From that point on, nothing is normal and Red and Buttons wonder if they'll survive long enough to spend all the money they just earned.
Why 5/5? Besides being the usual great writing from the Johnstone authors, the originality of the story, the authenticity of the characters and setting, I haven't read many Westerns about a stagecoach driver. I learned a lot and thoroughly enjoyed the ride.