<span>B. Georg accepts and the two begin to ponder a future of friendship.</span>
The answer is D. safe and secure.
Waverly is only six when this short story begins. She lives in Chinatown, in San Francisco, and at such a young age, she sees the world in a simple way. As a first-person narrator she says, for instance, that she didn't think of herself as a poor child because her bowl was always full.
In the excerpt, she seems to wish to convey that comfortable simplicity. The smell of food combined with her father leaving to work and the door being locked evoke a sensation of safety, the belief that everything is and will always be just fine.
I would say A, <span>She has been raised in a society that views women as physically weak and incapable; thus, she does not think she can win a war against Creon. My reasoning is when a woman isn't excepted it can either cause war or eventually leave someone to believe that lie. However, that is only something I could guess from the information given. I have not read the story that this has related to. So I'm only making a conclusion off a logical statement. I hope this helps.
</span>
Growl, bark, lean into its owner, lick, fold its ears back
C. As a perfect hostess would great a guest