The bird and his sister, the red-haired boohoo, have come to meet the boy of the crow tribe. The boy is the son of one of the tribe's former chiefs, and he is known as the "golden crow" because of his golden color. The two of them have a conversation in which the boy reveals that he is a girl and that he has caught a fish. The bird shows the boy how to make a fire, and the boy eats the fish. He tells the boy that the statues of his former chiefs have been destroyed and that the girl must be expelled from the tribe. He says that he will make the tribe pay for the destruction.
The bird and his sister, the red-haired boohoo, have come to meet the boy of the crow tribe. The boy is the son of one of the tribe's former chiefs, and he is known as the "golden crow" because of his golden color. The two of them have a conversation in which the boy reveals that he is a girl and that he has caught a fish. The bird shows the boy how to make a fire, and the boy eats the fish. He tells the boy that the statues of his former chiefs have been destroyed and that the girl must be expelled from the tribe. He says that he will make the tribe pay for the destruction.