On the stagecoach to Cheyenne, a mixed group of passengers must work together to survive the arduous journey and the Indian attacks.
A group of unlikely traveling companions find themselves on the same stagecoach to Cheyenne. They include a drunken doctor, a bar girl who's been thrown out of town, a professional gambler, a traveling liquor salesman, a banker who has decided to embezzle money, a gunslinger out for revenge and a young woman going to join her army captain husband. All have secrets but when they are set upon by an Indian war party and then a family of outlaws, they find they must all work together if they are to stay alive.—garykmcd
In 1880, strangers board in Dry Fork, Wyoming Territory, the stagecoach eastward to Cheyenne. Many have secrets that they are running from. Alcoholic Doc Boone, barred from practicing medicine, preys on the sample bag of gullible whiskey salesman Samuel Peacock. Dancehall prostitute Dallas is being driven out of town but will redeem her self by helping delivering the baby of pregnant Lucy Mallory who hoped rejoining first her cavalry officer husband US Cavalry captain Jim Mallory, while dashing Southern ex-officer Hatfield showers his gallantry on Lucy. Marshal Curly Wilcox is hell-bent on delivering to justice escaped prisoner Ringo, unjustly convicted for murder and with a crush on Dallas, spelling a confrontation with the real killer Luke Plummer and his kin Matt and Ike. Henry Gatewood robbed his own bank and has an urgent appointment with seasoned criminals. As the stage sets out, U.S. Cavalry Lieutenant Blanchard announces that Crazy Horse and his Sioux are on the warpath, so his small troop will provide an escort part of the way, but when hey reach a burnt-out stage inn, the cavalry leaves on pursuit. The civilians decide to continue the journey, returning possibly being no safer.—KGF Vissers