A tree grows in Brooklyn - Betty Smith [211]
She stood before the mirror in her white slip. As she curved her arm over her head in washing, she remembered how she had sat on the fire escape when a little girl and watched the big girls in the flats across the yards getting ready for their dates. Was someone watching her as she had once watched?
She looked towards the window. Yes, across two yards she saw a little girl sitting on a fire escape with a book in her lap and a bag of candy at hand. The girl was peering through the bars at Francie. Francie knew the girl, too. She was a slender little thing of ten, and her name was Florry Wendy.
Francie brushed out her long hair, braided it and wound the braids around her head. She put on fresh stockings and white high-heeled pumps. Before she slipped a fresh pink linen dress over her head, she sprinkled violet sachet powder on a square of cotton and tucked it inside her brassiere.
She thought she heard Fraber’s wagon come in. She leaned out of the window and looked. Yes, the wagon had come in. Only it wasn’t a wagon anymore. It was a small maroon motor truck with the name in gilt letters on the sides and the man making preparations to wash it wasn’t Frank, the nice young man with rosy cheeks. He was a little bandy-legged draft-exempt fellow.
She looked across the yards and saw that Florry was still staring at her through the bars of the fire escape. Francie waved and called:
“Hello, Francie.”
“My name ain’t Francie,” the little girl yelled back. “It’s Florry, and you know it, too.”
“I know,” said Francie.
She looked down into the yard. The tree whose leaf umbrellas had curled around, under and over her fire escape had been cut down because the housewives complained that wash on the lines got entangled in its branches. The landlord had sent two men and they had chopped it down.
But the tree hadn’t died…it hadn’t died.
A new tree had grown from the stump and its trunk had grown along the ground until it reached a place where there were no wash lines above it. Then it had started to grow towards the sky again.
Annie, the fir tree, that the Nolans had cherished with waterings and manurings, had long since sickened and died. But this tree in the yard—this tree that men chopped down…this tree that they built a bonfire around, trying to burn up its stump—this tree lived!
It lived! And nothing could destroy it.
Once more she looked at Florry Wendy reading on the fire escape.
“Good-bye, Francie,” she whispered.
She closed the window.
About the Author
BETTY SMITH was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1896, the daughter of German immigrants, and grew up in the borough’s Williamsburg section. In addition to A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Betty Smith’s novels include Tomorrow Will Be Better (1947), Maggie-Now (1958), and Joy in the Morning (1963). She also had a long career as a dramatist, during which she received both the Rockefeller Fellowship and the Dramatists Guild Fellowship. She died in 1972.
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Books by Betty Smith
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Tomorrow Will Be Better
Maggie-Now
Joy in the Morning
Credits
Jacket design by Roberto de Vicq de Cumptich
Copyright
A hardcover edition of this book was published in 1943 by Harper & Brothers.
A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN. Copyright © 1943, 1947 by Betty Smith. Foreword copyright © 2001 by Anna Quindlen. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read