Define the sum of the non-negative numbers $\{r_s \mid s \in S\}$ $S$ uncountable to be
$$\sup _{D \subseteq S} \sum _{d \in D} r_d$$
($D$ being finite), which exists if this supremum is finite.
Define a point function to be a function from $[0, 1]$ to $\mathbb R$ that is $0$ everywhere except for a single point, where it takes a positive value.
Suppose we have an uncountable family of point functions $f_r: [0, 1] \to \mathbb R$ indexed by $r \in [0, 1]$. Define the pointwise sum function $S[a, b]: [0, 1] \to \mathbb R$ as
$$S[a, b] (x) = \sum _{r \in [a, b]} f_r (x) \ .$$
It can be shown that if $S[0, 1]$ is well defined, then so is $S[0, a]$ for any $a$ such that $0 \le a < 1$.
Assume that if $S[0, 1]$ is well defined. Does it follow that for Lebesgue almost every $a \in [0, 1]$ the function $S[0, a]$ is discontinuous at at least one point?