Read the passage from “Initiation.”

"Get up, gopher," Bev ordered.

There was something about her tone that annoyed Millicent. It was almost malicious. And there was an unpleasant anonymity about the label "gopher," even if that was what they always called the girls being initiated. It was degrading, like being given a number. It was a denial of individuality.

Rebellion flooded through her.

"I said get up. Are you deaf?"

Millicent got up, standing there.

"Into the house, gopher. There's a bed to be made and a room to be cleaned at the top of the stairs."

This is an example of external conflict because it features character vs.

character conflict. In this passage, Millicent is in conflict with Bev, who is ordering her around and using demeaning language. Millicent feels annoyed and degraded by Bev's tone and the label "gopher." This conflict is external because it involves two characters in opposing roles and desires.

This passage depicts an external conflict between the character Millicent and Bev.