Read the two passages from Rosa Parks.

1. But the bus stand was packed, so Parks, disinclined to jockey for a rush-hour seat, crossed Dexter Avenue to do a little shopping at Lee's Cut-Rate Drug. She had decided to treat herself to a heating pad but found them too pricey. Instead, she bought some Christmas gifts, along with aspirin, toothpaste, and a few other sundries, and headed back to the bus stop wondering how her husband's day had been at the Maxwell Air Force Base Barber Shop and thinking about what her mother would cook for dinner.

It was in this late-day reverie that Rosa Parks dropped her dime in the box and boarded the yellow-olive city bus.

2. The bus driver twisted around and locked his eyes on Rosa Parks. Her heart almost stopped when she saw it was James F. Blake, the bully who had put her off his bus twelve years earlier. She didn't know his name, but since that incident in 1943, she had never boarded a bus that Blake was driving.

What correct inference can you make based on these two passages?

A) Parks's shopping trip meant that she needed a seat so she did not have to carry her bags.

B) Parks was too distracted by other things to hear when Blake demanded she give up her seat.

C) Parks's busy day led her to be more determined to keep her seat.

D) Parks's busy day and the crowded bus stop led her to accidentally board Blake's bus.

Read the two passages from Rosa Parks 1 But the bus stand was packed so Parks disinclined to jockey for a rushhour seat crossed Dexter Avenue to do a little sho class=