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.”
It would take years of legal battles, of hiding, of looking over her shoulder. But on that day, in that moment, Betty Mahmoody did something she had not done in two years. She closed her eyes, tilted her face to the sun, and whispered a single word: “Home.” not without my daughter book
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. Ali counted it, sighed, and pointed to a beat-up truck
And then—silence. They were on Turkish soil. We walk the last twenty
The snow on the Alborz Mountains looked deceptively peaceful, like a postcard slipped under the door of a nightmare. Betty Mahmoody stared at it from the frost-veined window of her mother-in-law’s apartment in Tehran, a city that had become her gilded cage. Just three weeks ago, that snow had been a novelty. Now, it was a wall.
But Betty did not give up. She learned the geography of her confinement. The apartment had three bedrooms, a kitchen, and a balcony that overlooked a busy street. The street was freedom, just fifty feet away. But freedom was a mirage. Without a passport, without money, without a language, she would be picked up by the revolutionary guards within an hour.
Mahtob, wise beyond her years, nodded. She had stopped calling Moody “Daddy.” She called him “that man.”