How does Sa’ cook the rabbit?
(p. 47) Answer: She boils it to make a broth. Ch’idzigyaak pretends to sleep while Sa’ does all the work. What keeps her from lying still? (p. 47) Answer: She has to get up to relieve her bladder. What was the women’s prime source of energy? (p. 50) Answer: Meat. What water source were the two old women looking for? (p. 50) Answer: They sought a narrow creek that would lead them to the place they remembered with all the fish. What day did the women find the creek? (p. 50) On the sixth day they found the creek. Which one of the old women always seems to find the negative side of a situation? (p. 51) Answer: Ch’idzigyaak. What is the first sign Ch’idzigyaak sees that tells her she’s at the old campsite? (p. 52) Answer: She spots the old fish racks they once hung. What did the old women say when they realized they made it? (p. 52) Answer: They said nothing, because they were speechless. Why could the two old women know what the other was thinking? (p. 52) Answer: Because they had been tog