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.”
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.” not without my daughter book
Behind them, they heard dogs barking. Flashlights flickered in the distance. Iranian border patrol. Ali hissed, “Faster! They have dogs!” They met Ali, the smuggler, in a dusty
The shift happened slowly. She stopped arguing with Moody. She cooked his favorite meals. She smiled at his mother. She wore the required manteau and headscarf without complaint when they went to the bazaar. Moody relaxed, thinking he had broken her. He allowed her to take Mahtob to the park, always accompanied by a sister-in-law. He bragged to his friends, “My American wife has finally seen the light.” “A woman and a child
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.