Re: Savannah/G
She nodded, because really there wasn't much more to say about that. There was nothing that G could do either. Instead she hugged him. "We'll do fine."
Savannah chuckled. "I know. We'll buy you postcards and a snow globe to soften the distance." She wasn't one to promote the type of lifestyle that some lived here, but she believed in inclusion and Christian acceptance, but she also knew the reality of the South once you left the big cities and even there, people knew how to cover it better, but the feelings were there anyway.
"No one would mind you having Sam or Derek with you as long as they were doing what you say, but there is one way that things could be done easier. No cults, but a good Christian home to help those that have sinned or don't have the proper support. Folks might just be a little more accepting of the good old Reverend Leon helping out those who'd lost the way. Once you find the area, we can find someone that left and hasn't come back in generation, tie it that way to the land, it makes everyone a lot more helpful if old Joe's great-grandaughter is coming home to do God's work, and if she's got some problem back in Tennessee because the parents didn't like her marrying her a Catholic boy and now spoke to the sheriff to create some trumped up charge, forcing them to leave- Well, you know, people simply want to help if you smile a lot and share recipes and go to church with whoever is the important woman in town." She might have fought them at the beginning, but now they were talking about finding a safe place for her child and Savannah would speak to every local person if she had to.