In 1977 I helped build a coral rock wall across from the Coconut Grove Playhouse. It's still there and I visited my section last week.
My fifty feet includes a number of sculptural features and one small cave. Inside I created a miniature cemetery. The two-inch headstones had teeny, barely readable epitaphs. I enjoyed taking friends on the secret graveyard visits for decades.
The cave's entrance was blocked by a fist-size rock. When it was discovered by strangers, my minuscule chamber changed. When grave stones went missing I quickly made new ones.
Sextons have serious responsibilities.
After two decades of cave-care I gave up. The dark hole stayed empty for a while then took on new life. People started putting trinkets, poetry, and small bills inside.
Last week I visited the wall once more. This time my mini-cave was stuffed with money. Had I won the lottery?
Hardly. There were enough damp dollars to purchase a few lottery tickets -and- ten bucks Bahamian.
I assumed my fern-covered orifice had become a voodoo font of good luck. I let the wet bills be.
You don't mess with Mother Nature, secret caves, and the traditions that go with them.
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Another stone mason's section, near mine, now covered with incredible banyan roots.
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