Answer:
The Granny from "Granny And The Golden Bridge" is shown as an old, crazy woman, but brave and strong enough to take care of herself.
Step-by-step explanation:
The character of Granny in Claribel Alegria's short story "Granny And The Golden Bridge" is first introduced by the narrator Manuel as a "crazy, but a very active old lady". She was also a hardworking old lady who would cook and sell beans, tortillas and rice to the troops stationed at the bridge.
Granny played a huge role in the events that follow after the destruction of the bridge she proudly calls "my little bridge". When one of the rebels who was supposed to part of the demolition team was killed, Granny took the dead rebel's possessions. She also helped (which we learned later in the story) the rebels in their plan to blow up the bridge.
Crazy also suited her, for when the Guards came inquiring about the whereabouts of the old lady who used to sell food to the troops, she herself (in disguise) told them a complete fabricated lie. Complaining about her loss of business running a brothel, she told them that the old lady had moved after the bridge was blown up, thus saving herself. Then, the narrator ends the story by telling us that his Granny had been doing business with the rebels, acting as a fruit seller where in reality, she's selling "Fragmentation grenades, G-3 cartridges, 81- millimeter mortar rounds."
The whole story shows Granny to be a strong, independent woman, though old but still brave enough to even save her own skin. She showed extreme bravery and an unyielding spirit. The demolition of the bridge may have destroyed her food-selling business but she found ways to sustain herself, selling weapons to rebels on the far side of the river.