Answered

Read the following passage from "Swaddling Clothes."
He was always busy, Toshiko's husband. Even tonight he had to dash off to an appointment, leaving her to go home
alone by taxi. But what else could a woman expect when she married an actor-an attractive one? No doubt she had
been foolish to hope that he would spend the evening with her. And yet he must have known how she dreaded going
back to their house, unhomely with its Western-style furniture and with the bloodstains still showing on the floor...
They left the night club and Toshiko stepped into the taxi that her husband had called for her. "Take this lady to
Ushigome," he told the driver and shut the door from the outside. Toshiko gazed through the window at her
husband's smiling face and noticed his strong, white teeth. Then she leaned back into the seat, oppressed by the
knowledge that their life together was in some way too easy, too painless. It would have been difficult for her to put
her thoughts into words. Through the rear window of the taxi she took a last look at her husband. He was striding
along the street toward his Nash car, and soon the back of his rather garish tweed coat had blended with the figures
of the passers-by.
After reading these paragraphs, which of the following might the reader most likely conclude about Toshiko?
(1 point)
She appreciates her husband's role as protector and caretaker of their family.
She is proud that she married a handsome actor.
She resents her husband's mannerisms and ability to dismiss her worries so casually.
She is offended that her husband has so easily adopted a lifestyle influenced by the West.