I was 16 when my mother left me at the airport
like I was a forgotten handbag.
“Figure it out… you know how,” she said, shrugging.
And she left.
On vacation.
With her new husband
and his “perfect” children.
I stood there holding my ticket
with my heart in pieces.
I didn’t cry.
Not in front of them.
I sat down.
Took a breath.
And called the one name I had sworn never to say again:
my father—the “absent” one.
He didn’t ask questions.
He just said:
“Stay there.”
Thirty minutes later,
a private jet landed.
And when my mother came back…
she found my bedroom empty
and a legal notice waiting for her.
It was at Mexico City International Airport.
A Saturday in July.
Endless lines.
Happy families dragging suitcases.
My mother, Valeria Montes, wore sunglasses
and a flawless white dress.
Beside her stood her new husband, Ricardo Salazar,
with two blond children
I was supposed to call “little siblings,”
even though they looked at me
like I ruined the family photo.
“Figure it out… you know how,” my mother said,
shrugging.
She placed the ticket in my hand—a cheap flight with a long layover—and pointed toward security like she was sending me to buy bread.
“Mom… what about you?” I asked, feeling my throat tighten.
“We’re going on vacation. We’ll let you know when we’re back,” she replied without lowering her voice. Then she leaned in with that smile that only exists to wound. “Don’t make a scene. You’re grown now.”
And she walked away. Toward the VIP boarding gate with her new family, without looking back. I stood there holding the ticket and a shattered heart.
I didn’t cry in front of them. I didn’t give them that show. I sat in a row of cold metal chairs, breathed slowly, and called the one name I had sworn never to say again: my father. The “absent” one. The man my mother spoke about as if he were a hereditary embarrassment.
Alejandro Montes answered on the second ring.
“Yes?”
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