Which of these inferences about the bride is most strongly supported by paragraph 6?

As she had slowly moved up the aisle toward the altar he had felt an unworthy, sullen exultation that had served to support him. He had told himself that her paleness was from thoughts of another than the man to whom she was about to give herself. But even that poor consolation had been wrenched from him. For, when he saw that swift, limpid, upward look that she gave the man when he took her hand, he knew himself to be forgotten. Once that same look had been raised to him, and he had gauged its meaning. Indeed, his conceit had crumbled; its last prop was gone. Why had it ended thus? There had been no quarrel between them, nothing—

The bride is not thinking about Trysdale during her wedding.

The bride seems distraught during her wedding.

The bride is nervous during the wedding and keeps looking at Trysdale.

The bride seems angry during the wedding.