The narrator complains to his brother that the man he just kissed is stingy, cold, mean, and stupid. He wants to know why he feels like someone is talking bad behind his back. He wonders if the brothers are related to him. He also wonders if they can read people and get their change of clothes. The narrator says that he saw it in the national geographic, not in the local one. He says that the city girls and the indigenous girls seem to have the same messiness. He asks his brother if he can get rid of the gifts he has received from his tribe, and he says that they are symbolic of his bond with his tribe. He tells his brother to stop wasting his time, and they will have new clothes only after they get married.
The narrator complains to his brother that the man he just kissed is stingy, cold, mean, and stupid. He wants to know why he feels like someone is talking bad behind his back. He wonders if the brothers are related to him. He also wonders if they can read people and get their change of clothes. The narrator says that he saw it in the national geographic, not in the local one. He says that the city girls and the indigenous girls seem to have the same messiness. He asks his brother if he can get rid of the gifts he has received from his tribe, and he says that they are symbolic of his bond with his tribe. He tells his brother to stop wasting his time, and they will have new clothes only after they get married.