Salvadore "Sally" Lautner grits his teeth and listens to the usually ignored 'voice of reason' somewhere in the back of his head. A good number of rank-and-file folk in respirators and cleansuits have very fine guns pointed and he and his fellow survivors, so, he of course has returned that sentiment in kind with his M249 LMG (a very fun light machine gun, indeed).
Behind him, the Sheriff is being good natured as he asks JD to surrender his sixgun. JD's less than inclined to hear that, from the sound of it.
In front of him, Deputy Marshal Fell is doing the same, appealing to reason and good sense, willing everyone to take a step back and lower their weapons. The fella from the Feeb had already dropped his own piece... what did, he have to say about "quarantine"?
Some folks are listening to Mason Fell's calm words, and Sally's going against his common nature when he does the same. He unshoulders the strap of his rifle and points the barrel to the floor. Mason, bound in chains or not, had been nothin' but on the up-and-up with he and his. If you can't trust a fellow Marine that hunts demons, well, shit, you can't really trust anything, huh?
As he slinks to the back of the bus to put his back to a wall, Sally pulls out his flask and takes the last swig of Adam Morsi's whiskey. Here's hopin' you made it onto the ride, Morsi. The liquor burns a bit- in the last hour or so, Sally'd had most of his insides blown out of either side of his body. That filling station where they nicked the diesel probably had more of his guts strewn across it than were left in his belly. One of the docs had stapled him back together after the third run for fuel, and Dr. Zinc had gave him another booster of that sweet, sweet mojo.
Slipping the empty flask back to his belt, Sally reaches into the back of his battle vest, fidgets some, and pulled out his spare canteen. It's not standard issue, and it's mostly empty, but it'll have to do. While he takes a big swig of some flat, stale gatorade, he shifts the Smith & Wesson .500 fiveshot from its place on his hip holster to where the canteen had been stashed.
When the revolver is snug against the small of his back, Sally plops down onto one of the bus seats and does his best to stay out of the way. He thinks back to when he was hobbling back into the rec hall. Jacob, another Bound, had literally dragged him away from that Butcher, kicking and screaming. Good sense had not prevailed in that mess. Somebody had said he'd been dropped six or seven times in those three go-rounds, but his count was more like eight or nine. Magic, medicine, Dr. Zinc's mojo, and the Good Lord had kept kicking him back up though. Kicking him back up to keep running circles around that monster, only to rush in, slug him in the back of the head, and dash back out.
So, for the sake of keepin' the peace, Sally set his rifle on the seat in front of him, tucked his hands into his vest (he could feel the surgical staples keep his belly inside his abdomen), and let the Feds do their thing. They might even bag and tag his rifle.
But, what was it his Gammy used to say back in coal country?
"Sallyboy, dere's more'n 'un way to skin a polecat."
Sally shifts on that bus seat, so that the butt of his revolver diggs into his back.
More 'n' un way, in deed.