She didn’t even lower her voice when she said it.
“Figure it out… you know how.”
A shrug. A flick of her manicured hand. And then she turned away.
Vacation.
With her new husband.
And his “perfect” children.
I stood there at Mexico City International Airport, ticket trembling between my fingers, trying to understand how a mother could make abandonment sound like a life lesson.
It was July. The airport buzzed with families in sandals and sun hats, dragging colorful suitcases toward departures. My mother, Valeria Montes, looked like she belonged on a magazine cover—white dress, oversized sunglasses, flawless smile. Beside her, Ricardo Salazar adjusted his designer carry-on while his two blond children stared at me the way people look at something that doesn’t match the décor.
“Mom… what about you?” I asked quietly.
“We’re going on vacation. We’ll let you know when we’re back,” she replied, already glancing toward the VIP entrance. Then she leaned closer, her perfume sharp and expensive. “Don’t make a scene. You’re grown now.”
And just like that, I was luggage she decided not to check in.
I didn’t cry. Not there. Not where they could see.
I sat on one of those cold metal airport chairs, inhaled slowly, and did the one thing I had sworn I would never do.
I called my father.
The “absent” one. The man my mother described as irresponsible, unreliable, a mistake best forgotten.
Alejandro Montes answered on the second ring.
“Yes?”
“She left me,” I said. My voice sounded smaller than I felt.
There was a pause—not confusion, not shock. Just calculation.
“Stay there,” he said.
“That’s it?”
“Send me your location. Now.”
Thirty minutes later, the atmosphere shifted. Airport staff moved differently. A black vehicle with clearance rolled past barriers no one else could cross. A man wearing an earpiece approached me.