I liked "Little Rabbit," by and large, but I felt the kid was showing bad judgment at a critical point. When the enemy had captured Fighting Hawk, it seemed to me that Little Rabbit's top priority should have been to carry a warning to his own tribe as quickly as possible, since no one else was available to do so. Instead, he hung around to see if he could rescue Fighting Hawk from the Apaches, and then maybe they could make it back home together. I call that substituting "wishful thinking" for "tactics."
Fighting Hawk himself agreed with me, expressing the opinion that this was a lousy idea, but Little Rabbit thought he knew better than a veteran warrior.
Since they did, somehow, make it home without being caught, even though a caption says they didn't dare move their horses at anything faster than a walk, it all worked out pretty well, and thus Little Rabbit became a "hero" to his people . . . but if they'd been caught because of the need to move so slowly for Fighting Hawk's sake, then there easily could have been heavy casualties among the Sioux side of this conflict when they were subsequently slammed by a sneak attack from the Apaches, and I'd say that the resulting body count among the Sioux largely would have been the fault of Little Rabbit for not bringing vital intelligence home as quickly as possible.
So what's the message here? "Kids, you can, in fact, do everything you want to, all at once, instead of needing to set priorities and grit your teeth as you concentrate on doing the most important thing first and letting other people take their chances sometimes. Even if 'older and wiser' heads try to tell you that you are overreaching, taking too many risks, just ignore them! When everything comes up roses, it will prove you were right all along!"