My Daughter Ignored My CallsThen I Found Out Her Secret
My daughter, Eleanor, used to ring me every Sunday without fail, even if just for a quick chat. Those calls were our little traditiondiscussing her job in London, the latest novel shed read, or her attempts at making a proper roast dinner. Once, she phoned from the supermarket to ask, Mum, how long do I parboil the potatoes for mash again? Id chuckle because shed asked me that very question the week before.
But in early April, the calls vanished.
At first, I assumed she was swampedperhaps a big project at her marketing firm or a weekend away with her husband, Oliver. A week passed, then another. I sent texts*How are you, love? Miss hearing from you. Give me a ring when you can.* All went unread. Even her brothers birthday came and went without a word.
This wasnt like her. A mother knows. Something wasnt right.
My instincts proved correct.
It was my son, William, who finally broke the silence. One evening, he rang and mentioned hed spoken to her briefly. Shes alright, he said, but his voice wavered. Then, almost as an aside, he added, Though Olivers been insisting she quit her job. Says he prefers her at home. She claims its less stressful this way.
My stomach lurched.
William dismissed it, suggesting Oliver was just old-fashioned, that I was reading too much into it. But I know my daughter. Eleanors fiercely independentshed worked her way up from an intern to a senior manager. She wouldnt surrender her career without a battle.
That night, I barely slept. I lay awake, imagining the worstwas she being manipulated? Too scared to speak up? Was she in danger?
By dawn, Id made my decision.
The next morning, I drove straight to her flat in Bristolfour hours without a break. Each mile tightened the knot in my chest. I had no strategy, just a mothers certainty that Eleanor needed me.
When she opened the door, I hardly knew her.
Shed lost weight. Dark circles framed her tired eyes. Her smile didnt reach her cheeks, and she kept glancing over her shoulder, as if waiting for an interruptionor worse, an order.
My pulse raced. I stepped closer and whispered, Youre leaving with me. Now.
She hesitated. I cant. Not yet.
My breath caught. Why? Whats happening, darling?
Silence. Then she sighed and moved aside. Come in, Mum.
The flat looked like a hurricane had struck. Cushions were torn, the rug was frayed, andwas that straw on the kitchen tiles?
I gaped. What in blazes happened here?
Before she could answer, movement caught my eye. I turnedand there, amidst the wreckage, sat an exuberant golden retriever pup, tail thumping, gnawing joyfully on a mangled slipper.
I stared. Is that a sheep in your loo?
She winced. Two, actually.
As it turned out, she and Oliver had volunteered to foster rescue animalsjust for a fortnight, she explained. But two weeks had spiralled into ten creatures: two sheep, three kittens, two pups, and a pair of rabbits with a taste for furniture.
I stood there, stunnedfour hours of dread, imagining the worstonly to discover my daughter had simply become a full-time carer for a menagerie.
I burst out laughing. First a chuckle, then uncontrollable giggles until tears streamed down my face. She joined in, and soon we were both breathless with laughter and relief.
All that fear, all those nightmaresand it boiled down to a home overrun with paws, wool, and utter madness.
I spent the day helping her tidy, feed the animals, and, naturally, fuss over the pup whod started it all.
As evening fell, she squeezed my hand and murmured, You always know when I need you, Mum.
Perhaps a mothers intuition never truly misfireseven when it leads you to a lounge occupied by sheep.
The lesson? Sometimes, the scariest shadows are just the chaos of love in disguise.







