the one that bothered me.


The gal who said she didn't want her father to go with her, because she hardly knew him, as had always been with her mother. That didn't sound right to me.

That was probably the point in him deciding to go, because he had missed out on bonding with her while working, and thought that might make up for it. When she chalked it up to him wanting to live vicariously through the experience it didn't ring true to me.

Unless he happened to be one of the men with whom one of the cheatin' moms had an affair, then she'd have a right to grouse--but otherwise it seemed unfair of her to complain that her father wanted to be there for her.

"Well, for once the rich white man is in control!" C. M. Burns

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