“He always said his mom did so much for him, he wanted to start giving back to his mom,” Castillo said.
Castillo asked what he wanted to go into, and Bryant said he thought architecture, but he was not completely sure.
“He always had a way to make people smile,” Castillo remembered.
“I said the best thing you could do is liberal arts and get a little bit of everything,” Castillo recalled.
We make our way to Castillo San Felipe del Morro, a 16th-century fortress on the westernmost tip of the island.
True, the castillo was a bulwark, but its guns were not only obsolete—many of them were unserviceable.
Gilbert, Montenegro, Garcia and Castillo all smiled subduedly as they took their stations on the platform.
The most effective bombardment of Castillo de San Marcos occurred during the 1740 siege, and shot did the most damage.
Castillo says not more than two days, and that he will hardly regain the full use of his intellects.
The castillo is a real one and the most accessible in Spain, and all its surroundings are gratefully in harmony.