Sandra Smith looked at her in shock and disbelief.
She saw Charles Glenn retrieve his hand from the back of her head, placing it in front of her, demanding, "Am I still clean? Does this count as meddling?"
Sandra: "Are you crazy?"
"Sandra, I never consider myself superior to others. If having living parents and a happy family can make one feel superior, then what do heroes who sacrificed their lives for the country count as? You fell in love, broke up, had an abortion; none of that was your fault or something you actively sought out. If I were to discriminate against you because of that, it would only prove that I'm not someone worth entrusting your life to. Everything has its flaws, and it's good that you have yours; otherwise, how could I squeeze into your life?"
His short speech was calm but powerful.
Sandra gazed at her, and suddenly remembered a sentence Amelia Cobb had said: "Sometimes, I feel like he's my god."
"Dragging him down to earth is a sin."