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not without my daughter book

Not - Without My Daughter Book

Three days later, after a harrowing journey to Ankara and a tense interrogation at the American embassy, Betty held a new passport. Mahtob’s small hand was still clutched in hers. The consul looked at them—two ragged, exhausted Americans with haunted eyes—and said softly, “Welcome home, Mrs. Mahmoody.”

Mahtob, wise beyond her years, nodded. She had stopped calling Moody “Daddy.” She called him “that man.”

They met Ali, the smuggler, in a dusty garage on the outskirts of Tabriz. He was a small, wiry man with a scarred face and the eyes of a predator. He looked at Betty and Mahtob and shook his head. “A woman and a child? The mountains will eat you.”

Betty wrote the name on a scrap of paper: Ali. She hid it in the hem of Mahtob’s coat. not without my daughter book

Betty laughed, a nervous, hollow sound. “Don’t be ridiculous, Moody. The flight is tomorrow.”

She woke Mahtob with a kiss. “Time for the adventure,” she whispered.

The child did not cry. She dressed in the dark. They crept down the stairs—twelve flights, counting each landing, holding their breath. The lobby was empty. The street was a dark river of shadows. A taxi idled at the corner, its driver a grizzled old man named Reza whom Mrs. Hakimi had vouched for. He didn’t ask questions. He just said, “Get in.” Three days later, after a harrowing journey to

The flight back to Michigan was long and silent. Mahtob slept. Betty stared out the window at the Atlantic Ocean, a vast blue expanse that felt like the first safe thing she had seen in two years. She thought of Moody, who would wake to an empty apartment, who would rage and threaten and swear vengeance. She knew he would fight for custody. She knew the nightmare was not entirely over. But for now, she was airborne. For now, she was free.

The guard’s eyes narrowed. But Betty had prepared for this. She launched into a stream of practiced Farsi: “My daughter is ill. We go to the doctor in the north. Please, God bless you, let us pass.”

It had all started with a promise. Her husband, Moody, a handsome, charismatic Iranian-born doctor, had looked into her eyes in their suburban Michigan home and whispered, “A short vacation, Betty. Just to show the children their heritage. Two weeks. I swear on my life.” Mahmoody

Ali counted it, sighed, and pointed to a beat-up truck. “We leave now. The border is sixty kilometers. We walk the last twenty. If the soldiers see us, run. Do not look back. If you fall, I will not carry you.”

Ali pointed to a faint light in the distance. “That is a village. Go there. Tell them you are American. You will be safe now.” He turned and disappeared back into the darkness, back toward Iran. He had done his job.