Parental Love
Emily let out a weary but contented sigh as she settled her little ones into the taxi. Lily was four, and Jack was just a year and a half. They had spent a wonderful weekend with their grandparentsthere were biscuits, cuddles, bedtime tales, and a few more treats than theyd ever get at home.
Emily had been genuinely happy for the getaway, too. Her parents, sisters, and nieces embraced her without judgement or complicated explanations. Mums home cookingimpossible to refusefilled the kitchen with delicious aromas. The Christmas tree sparkled with fairy lights and those oddly charming, endearingly old decorations. Dads toasts, sometimes a touch too lengthy, never failed to be heartfelt. Mums presentsthoughtful, necessary, always given with love.
For a moment, Emily felt like a child again. All she wanted to say was, Mum, Dad, Im so grateful youre here.
With everyone buckled up in the taxi, the drive home was calm. The children, worn out by all the excitement, snuggled up beside each other and soon drifted offcontent, full, utterly happy.
On the way, Emily asked the driver to pull in at a little shop by the roadside.
Just a momentIll grab nappies and some bottled water, she told him.
Five minutes later, Emily walked back to the car, climbed inand her heart plummeted.
Her children were gone!
The driver was chatting away to a woman shed never seen before sitting up front.
I beg your pardon? Emily said, the words slow and uncertain.
The woman whipped round.
Who are you? Whats she doing here? she demanded.
The driver shrugged.
Not a clue! Then, turning to Emily, Who are you? What do you want?
Have you lost your mind? Where are my children?
The woman shrieked, Unbelievable! Youve got kids as well?! before belabouring the driver with her handbag.
Why do you let anyone climb in?! Emily shouted now. Where are my kids? Tell me!
What followed was three chaotic minuteseveryone shouting, accusing, arms waving, with Emily convinced of some vast, cosmic injustice.
And then, the car door opened and a man appeared, speaking with calm clarity:
Miss this isnt your car. Im parked a little further up.
Everything froze. Emily slammed the door in fury and dashed to another pale car just ahead, identical to the first.
She flung it open.
There, in the back seat, her two children slept soundlyangels, undisturbed.
Emily exhaled so deeply it was as though shed just walked back from the edge of a cliff. She climbed in and muttered,
Lets just go home.
Then it hit her: laughterreal, nervous, freeing. The driver joined in, dabbing his eyes, relieved everything had come to this: not tragedy, but a story theyd never forget.
Looking at her sleeping children, Emily suddenly understoodparents might be gentle, worn out, always ready with a laugh or a sigh, even a bit absent-minded. But at the whiff of danger, every parent becomes a lion.
No hesitation, no second-guessing, no fear. Only one instinctto protect!
Thats the shape of love: quiet and unbreakable. Unshakable when it matters most.












