Read the excerpt from chapter 6 of Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy.
Reverend Buckminster sighed. “It doesn’t matter if it’s true. It matters what people think. It matters that my congregation can what to think when my son goes out to visit a N*gro girl on Malaga Island. It doesn’t matter at all how she got you out there.” “It matters to me,” Turner whispered. “Speak up!” “It matters to me.” The grim silence circled the room like an eager tiger. It flicked its tail greedily at them, circling, circling, circling. Turner felt that it was about to pounce, claws fully out. And then it did. “Forbidden is forbidden. You will stay in the house for the next two weeks, Turner. If I cannot trust you not to go to the island, then I will have to keep you under my eye. You may not leave here except for church services. And that means you will not go down to the docks today. “” They’re not down on the docks. “” Speak up, Turner. Good lord, don’t mumble like a little whipped boy. “” They’re not down on the d*mn docks. “Which detail from the excerpt best supports the conclusion that Turner is frustrated with his father, Reverend Buckminster?O Turner’s act of whispering when he tells his father, “It matters to me.” O Turner’s thoughts when he reflects that the “grim silence circled the room.” O Turner’s feelings when he “felt that it was about to pounce, claws fully out. O Turner’s words when he says, ‘They’re not down on the d*mn docks.