Car full of Glocks and he carries a 1911, I love that.
Now the 1911,... it's for a Real shooter...
Mr. Nightcrawler might say "beware those sour notes..."
My much-more-adventurous-than-I online alter-ego does share the same handgun preferances as I do. Though, he is a lot more skilled with his than I am with mine.
Most of the time, he prefers a S&W 625 Mountain Gun in .45 Colt. (A newer one with the endurance package, that can handle warm handloads.) Other times, he'll carry a Colt NRM Gov't Model (sometimes suppressed). A CZ-97B has served as his car gun, and he's been known to pack a .357 Magnum, 3" SP101 and a MAC-10 .45 SMG on occasion. His preferred "all-around" rifle is a FAL he built himself, and he has a couple custom-made tranquilizer guns for less-lethal applications.
He also has a CZ-85B 9mm that might get some use for a future excursion to Canada. When in Rome, do as the Romans do. When in Canada or Europe, (or most of the rest of the world, actually) 9mm is all the rage...
Note that my doppelganger has a much bigger gun collection than I do. It's really not fair.
I mean, hell, I (the physical Nightcrawler) don't even OWN a Strela-2!
I try to diversify the guns in my stories, and I try to pick guns that fit the characters. The beautiful seniorita carried a nickeled Browning BDA .380; a Glock 27 would've probably been a more practical choice, but but it just doesn't FIT. Henry Hyde carried a SAA because...well, what else is a Johnny Cash-esqe guy going to carry? A Kimber? A Springfield XD?
In my previous story, the Triad guys usually carried Beretta 92s. This is because the Beretta 92 has been in nearly every Hong Kong blood opera, and it just worked for the role.
Oh, and for those seeing similarities to the film
Desperado and its sequels...I just saw Desperado for the first time tonight, and haven't seen the others. Any similarities are purely coincidental, though I'll freely admit that for these stories I borrow heavily from all kinds of sources. (You get bonus points if you can guess who originally said the "I've buried 'em all" line.)
Oddly enough, the other day I caught part of an old Charles Bronson western called
Once Upon a Time in the West, or something to that effect, that featured a harmonica-playing, SAA packing gunslinger. Eerie...