Read the passage from "Doe Season.”
"Well, we’ll see about that,” her father said, putting on his gloves. He turned to Andy. "How are you doing, honeybun?”
"Just fine,” she said.
Andy shivered and stamped as they unloaded: first the rifles which they unsheathed and checked . . . then the gear, their food and tents and sleeping bags and stove stored in four backpacks—three big ones for Charlie Spoon and her father and Mac, and a day pack for her.
"That’s about your size,” Mac said, to tease her.
She reddened and said, "Mac, I can carry a pack big as yours any day.” He laughed and pressed his knee against the back of hers, so that her leg buckled. "Cut it out,” she said. She wanted to make an iceball and throw it at him, but she knew that her father and Charlie were anxious to get going, and she didn’t want to displease them.
Which of Andy’s actions in this passage indicate her desire to please Charlie and her father?
She reddens in response to teasing.
She wants to throw an iceball at Mac.
She says she can carry one of the larger packs.
She says she is fine but shivers as they unload.