The Curious Case Of Benjamin | Button -2008- Hdri...

It was on the tugboat that he met the love of his life—or so he thought. Her name was Elizabeth Abbott, a British diplomat's wife, nearly sixty, with silver hair and a laugh like cracked bells. She was traveling alone to Memphis, and she spent the entire four-day journey in the wheelhouse with Benjamin, drinking tea and talking about poetry. She was the first woman to kiss him—on the cheek, then on the mouth. "You have old eyes," she whispered, "but young hands."

"Cat is easy. Spell 'Mississippi.'"

"We have a boy," the social worker said. "About seven years old. He doesn't speak much. But he keeps drawing a picture of a house on Elysian Fields Avenue. And he keeps spelling the word 'Mississippi' over and over." The Curious Case of Benjamin Button -2008- HDRi...

"You should leave," Daisy said one morning. Her voice was calm, but her hands were shaking. "Not because I don't love you. Because I do. And I cannot watch you become a child while I become a crone." It was on the tugboat that he met

"Excuse me," he said. "Do I know you?"

"No," he said.

It was around this time that Benjamin met Daisy. She was the first woman to kiss him—on