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Read the following passage and answer the question below.“Lessons in the Rising”The scent of warm bread drifted through the small kitchen as Abuela shaped the final roll. Her gnarled fingers moved slowly, but with purpose, smoothing the dough as if it were a sleeping child. Lucia stood by the window, watching dust dance in a sunbeam, the silence between them stretching comfortably. It was Sunday—the day Abuela baked and Lucia listened."When I was your age," Abuela said, not looking up, "my mother made bread before the sun rose. She said it reminded her that good things take time." Lucia turned, drawn by the softness in her voice. "She'd say, 'Flour without patience makes crumbs.' I didn't understand then. I do now."Lucia smiled. "Because you bake slow and talk slow?"Abuela chuckled, a low, steady sound. "Because I lived fast and learned slow."They sat together as the rolls rose. Outside, neighbors swept porches and called greetings in Spanish across the narrow street. The sounds of the neighborhood crept in—a dog barking, a car backfiring, a father calling his son in for lunch. Lucia loved the way everything seemed connected on Sundays."Sometimes," Abuela said, "life is like yeast. You can't see it working, but it is."Lucia thought about that. The quiet strength of her grandmother, the care in each roll, the way stories rose with the scent of bread—it all felt like something more than tradition. It felt like truth.When the timer rang, Abuela handed her the first roll. "It's yours. First bites are for the ones who wait well."Lucia took the warm roll, biting into its golden crust. It tasted like stories and silence and sunlit kitchens—and she understood something unspoken: that some lessons rise slowly, but they rise just the same. Which inference about Abuela’s character is best supported by the way she prepares the bread and speaks to Lucia?

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That she is patient, deliberate, and wise—someone who teaches by quiet example and values slow, careful work and tradition. The slow, purposeful way she handles the dough, her sayings about patience and rising, and the gentle, measured conversation with Lucia all support this.