I was 16 when my mother left me at the airport like a forgotten handbag.
“See how you manage… you know how,” she said, shrugging her shoulders. And she left. On vacation. With her new husband and his “perfect” children. I stood there, ticket in hand, my heart in pieces.
I didn’t cry. Not in front of them. I sat down. Breathed.
And called the one name I’d sworn never to utter again: my father—the “absent one.” He asked no questions. He simply said, “Stay right there.” Thirty minutes later, a private jet landed. And when my mother returned… she found my room empty and a lawyer’s letter waiting for her. It was at Frankfurt Airport. A Saturday in July. Endless lines. Happy families dragging suitcases behind them. My mother, Valerie Mende, wore sunglasses and a pristine white dress. Beside her stood her new husband, Richard Salzmann, with two blond children I was supposed to call “little siblings,” though she looked at me as if I were ruining the perfect family photo. “See how you manage… you know how,” my mother said, shrugging. She pressed the ticket into my hand—a cheap flight with a long layover—and pointed toward security as if sending me off to buy bread. “Mom… and what about you guys?” I asked, feeling my throat tighten. “We’re going on vacation. We’ll call when we get back,” she answered, without lowering her voice. Then she leaned forward, with that smile that exists only to hurt. “Don’t make a scene. You’re old enough now.” And she left. She walked with her new family toward the VIP boarding gate without looking back. I stood there with the ticket and a shattered heart. I didn’t cry in front of them. I didn’t want to put on that show for them. I sat down on one of the cold metal chairs, took a slow breath, and called the one name I’d sworn I’d never speak again: my father. The “absent one.” The man my mother always spoke of as if he were a family disgrace. Alexander Mende answered on the second ring. “Yes?” My voice was very quiet. “It’s me. She left me here.” Silence. No hesitation. Complete control.
“Stay right there,” he said. “How…?” “Don’t move. Send me your location. Immediately.” I did it, my hands trembling. I stared down the arrivals hall corridor as if it were a screen about to change the channel. There was no hope inside me—just a purely rational emptiness. If he didn’t come, I would, quite literally, be nobody to anyone. Thirty minutes later, the airport began to whisper. The ground staff suddenly became frantic. A black car with a special permit pulled up. A man with an earring asked my name. I stood up, confused. “Are you Camilla Mende?” he asked. I nodded. “Come with me.” He led me through a side door, away from the crowds, into a private area. And then I saw it through a large window: A private jet was landing. My legs almost gave way. Not because of the luxury. But it was because of this brutal certainty: My father—the “absent one”—had just set the world in motion for me in half an hour. A tall man appeared at the jet’s steps. Dark suit. Hard gaze. He didn’t smile. He simply opened his arms, as if the gesture were a command.
And I understood that being abandoned by my mother had just activated his most dangerous side. When she returned from her vacation… she would find my room empty. And a letter from a lawyer waiting for her. The jet smelled of new leather and coffee. I didn’t know what to do with my hands or what to do with the tears that finally wanted to flow. My father sat opposite me, without touching me at first, as if he needed to make sure I was real. “She left you alone at Frankfurt Airport?” he asked in a flat voice. I nodded. I pulled the ticket from my pocket and handed it to him like evidence. He looked at it for two seconds—long enough to understand everything: the budget airline, the endless layover, the “unaccompanied minor” box. “Did she say anything else?” he asked. “‘See how you manage…'”
‘You know how it goes.’ My voice broke, but I still wasn’t crying. My father tensed his jaw muscles. I noticed a slight twitch at his temple, as if he were holding back an explosion. ‘Good,’ he said. ‘Then we’ll sort this out now.’ What exactly Alexander Mende was doing during those hours… and why his mother’s return would be so different from what she had imagined? Part 2… He didn’t ask ‘why,’ as a normal man would. Because he already knew the why: My mother had spent years building a life in which I was the uncomfortable reminder of her past. The jet took off. I watched as Frankfurt shrank below us, and I was afraid—not of flying, but of what would happen when my father truly entered my life. I had grown up knowing that he was irresponsible, absent, almost a dangerous myth. And now he was here, with resources, with control, with a calm that was almost terrifying. “Where are we flying to?” I asked. “Home,” he answered. “To your home?” “To ours,” he corrected, and that word struck me strangely. We landed in Munich, in a private hangar. A car was already waiting. It wasn’t pointless luxury—it was pure logistics. Everything moved like a system designed to protect me and strike at the same time. In the car, my father made a phone call. “This is Alexander Mende. I want to initiate the expedited custody proceedings. Yes, today. Yes, I have evidence.” —Pause— “And I want an official complaint filed for child abduction and neglect.” I stared at him, dumbfounded. “Are you going to…sue her?” “I’m going to make sure she never uses you like an object again,” he said, without looking at me. That night, I slept in a huge bedroom that felt like a hotel room. New clothes hung in the wardrobe, a new phone lay on the bedside table, and a woman named Luzia spoke softly to me: “If you need anything, I’m here.” It was as if my father had prepared an alternative life for me even before I had asked for it. The next morning, a lawyer arrived: Fernanda Richter, a specialist in family law.



















































