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.”
The truck bounced along rutted dirt roads for hours. Mahtob vomited from the motion. Betty held her, whispering lullabies. The mountains grew larger, jagged teeth against a bruised purple sky. When the truck could go no further, they got out. The air was thin and cold. Snow covered the ground. not without my daughter book
And then—silence. They were on Turkish soil. The guard’s eyes narrowed
The flight to Tehran had been long. Mahtob had slept against her shoulder, and Betty had felt a flutter of adventure. They landed in a city that hummed with a foreign energy—the call to prayer, the scent of saffron and exhaust, the stern gaze of revolutionary guards. Moody’s family greeted them with effusive hugs and trays of sweets. His mother, a formidable woman with hennaed hair and eyes that missed nothing, kissed Betty on both cheeks. “You are home,” she said. We go to the doctor in the north
The guard hesitated, then waved them through. Betty’s blouse was soaked with sweat.
The night of the escape arrived in the gray hour before dawn. Moody was on a forty-eight-hour shift at the hospital. His mother was visiting relatives in Qom. The apartment was silent except for the hum of the heater. Betty’s hands shook as she packed a single bag: two changes of clothes, Mahtob’s asthma medicine, the hidden money, and a small photo of her parents in Michigan.
Betty wrote the name on a scrap of paper: Ali. She hid it in the hem of Mahtob’s coat.