Randy a fig is really a flower that's inside out. It is a syconium which is full of druplets. Think of a blackberry, each seed and surrounding pulp is a fruit, it is called a druplet. All together the druplets form a berry. In a fig it the same way. On the inside of the fig are druplets which each have seeds. In the case of a fig the fruits (druplets) are inside and a blackberry on the outside. So a fig is really a flower inside out. The whole topic of figs, the pollination of figs and the method of pollination is enough to fill several volumes. All the figs we have here are common figs, meaning they don't need pollination to produce fruit. That's a good thing as we don't have pollinators here in the US except in a few places in California. It takes a special wasp that is about the size of a small black sugar ant to pollinate figs. Look it up for some interesting reading and somewhat confusing. So on your tree you will not see any flowers, you will see small figs develop. They will grow and then at the given time ripen into a delicious fruit. Next time you have a fresh fig, cut it in half from eye to stem and study the make up. You will see the seeds and the small individual fruits or druplets that make up the fig. I hope I haven't confused you more than you were before. I will stop here but there is much more to say. It's some interesting reading if you look it up.
Thanks for asking.
"gene"