"If I move, maybe someday someone will
know my tree without knowing me. Or maybe
they'll know me a little. Maybe they'll look
at the tree and know that someone wanted
peaches way back then.
When told by his parents that he cannot grow a marshmallow tree, he changes his mind and chooses a peach tree. There are similarities between the two: sweet, sticky, feels like summer. Their work begins in the spring when they purchase a stick. He is not impressed, and neither is his friend Maya. She congratulates him on planting a stick. The two plant many similar sticks, assuming that in years to come they will produce even more sticks.
Nice work!
He continues to water the peach tree when his parents convince him that the roots are stretching down into the earth below him. To his surprise, the tree is soon covered with leaves. In a bad stroke of luck, Maya lets him know that she and her family are moving. For the rest of the year, including his birthday, Maya's move, the arrival of fall and winter, he is concerned for his tree. When bunnies nibble off the back due to hunger, he leaves them a warning that the tree will seek revenge for their actions. (And his father puts a cage around the tree.)
In the spring when the leaves burst forth once more, elderly Ruth moves into Maya's old house and regales him with stories of a cherry tree she once planted. Ruth is a great baker of oatmeal cookies which are consumed with regularity. A blossom appears on the peach tree, and soon he is writing a letter to Maya to tell her about it. She asks about the stick forest, which he says he continues watering. Unfortunately for Maya, Ruth is the one who gets to share a peach wedge. Together, they toast next year. One can only imagine what the future holds for that peach tree.
Nice work, indeed!


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