Matt sighed. Life was often not what you hoped it would be. In fact, it sometimes had a way of being entirely different. When his mom outlined the move to Pluto, she had pointed out the relative weight loss and the open spaces. One thing she had failed to mention was the freezing temperatures. The cold was unimaginable, and it required the constant wearing of a quadruple-layered heated suit.And “constant,” Matt reflected, really meant constant. The suit had to be worn even when sleeping. Luckily, his mom had scrimped to afford the upgraded, self-cleaning version. The other option would be disgusting.She also failed to mention that, when the ice turned into gas on the “warm” days, travel outside the 2,000 square foot station the family had been assigned to was impossible.Matt gazed up at the three moons. Charon, as usual, was shining brightly. Having spent most of his eleven years on Earth, Charon’s size still took Matt’s breath away. Pluto’s other two moons, Nix and Hydra, were also visible in the night sky. These three moons were the only attractive things about the dwarf planet as far as Matt was concerned.It was unfair, he thought bitterly. Other friends had settled on Mars. Some were even able to afford land on Venus. Matt couldn’t even text them anymore.

Which detail from the story best shows how Matt feels about living on Pluto?

“Charon, as usual, was shining brightly.”

“One thing she had failed to mention was the freezing temperatures.”

“It was unfair, he thought bitterly.”

“Luckily, his mom had scrimped to afford the upgraded, self-cleaning version.”

“It was unfair, he thought bitterly.”