Not Without My Daughter Book May 2026
For six months, she prepared. She memorized the streets of Tehran. She learned to say “I am lost” and “Take me to the Turkish embassy” in halting Farsi. She stitched money—small denominations—into the lining of her coat and into Mahtob’s doll. She told Mahtob a secret game: “We are going on an adventure, sweetheart. But you cannot tell anyone, not even Grandma. If you tell, the adventure will disappear.”
Betty picked up Mahtob and ran. The weight of her daughter, the burning in her lungs, the fear—it all fused into a single, animal instinct. She did not feel the cold. She did not feel the rocks cutting her feet through her thin shoes. She only felt the need to move. not without my daughter book
Mahtob, wise beyond her years, nodded. She had stopped calling Moody “Daddy.” She called him “that man.” For six months, she prepared
“We have money,” Betty said, pulling out the last of her hidden stash—nearly all of Mrs. Hakimi’s savings, plus what she had managed to pilfer from Moody’s wallet over the months. If you tell, the adventure will disappear
Betty and Mahtob stumbled into the village as the first call to prayer echoed over the mountains. A old Kurdish woman found them huddled against a wall, half-frozen. She didn’t speak English or Farsi, but she understood. She pulled them into her home, wrapped them in wool blankets, and fed them hot tea and bread.
But on the tenth day, the cracks appeared. Moody returned from visiting a cousin with a dark look. He tore up their return tickets at the breakfast table. “We are not going back,” he said, not looking at her.