Which detail from the text best supports the inference that Daniel will do the right thing?

Money
a one-act play

CHARACTERS:
DANIEL, a 17-year-old boy
MARK, a 17-year-old boy
MICHELLE, a teenage girl who's just gotten her license
MRS. NASH, a store manager
MR. FRANKLIN, a man who has lost his wallet

Setting: Daniel, wearing a supermarket apron over his clothes, walks quickly around the parking lot of a supermarket, collecting empty grocery carts and nesting them together. A car pulls up near him and parks. A girl named Michelle steps out of the car.

MICHELL: Hi, Daniel.

DANIEL: Hi, Michelle. When did you get your driver's license?

MICHELL: Last week. Now I run all the errands for my family. My mom just sent me here to pick up some milk.

DANIEL: That's what I'll be doing—all the family errands—as soon as I get my car.

(Daniel looks down and spots something. He picks up a brown leather wallet. His back is to Michelle. He opens the wallet and sees that it holds three 100-dollar bills, as well as a number of credit cards.)

MICHELL: What did you find?

DANIEL: It's somebody's wallet.

MICHELL: What are you going to do with it?

DANIEL: You know, when I first picked it up and saw that it had $300 in it, I had a bad thought. I thought about not saying anything to anyone and keeping the wallet and the money. The money would put me over the top so I could buy my car. Nobody would have known if I hadn't told you.

MICHELL: You would have known.

DANIEL: That's right, and I decided not to delude myself. Keeping things that don't belong to me is not the way I was raised. I'll take the wallet inside to the customer service desk. The manager can get the owner's information from the driver's license that is in here.

A. MICHELL: Last week. Now I run all the errands for my family. My mom just sent me here to pick up some milk.
B. MICHELL: What are you going to do with it?
C. DANIEL:You know, when I first picked it up and saw that it had $300 in it, I had a bad thought. I thought about not saying anything to anyone and keeping the wallet and the money. The money would put me over the top so I could buy my car. Nobody would have known if I hadn't told you.
D. DANIEL: That's right, and I decided not to delude myself. Keeping things that don't belong to me is not the way I was raised. I'll take the wallet inside to the customer service desk. The manager can get the owner's information from the driver's license that is in here.