A SCHOOLBOY moved his mum to tears with his heart-warming reaction to the London terror attack.

Zane Saeh, eight, spent hours drawing a picture of Keith Palmer as an angel, alongside a poem saying the police constable will still watch over the people he protected. 

PC Palmer was among four victims killed at Westminster on Wednesday during Khalid Masood's rampage.

Kidlington schoolboy Zane caught news coverage of the attack on a leisure centre television on Thursday, before he went to a karate class. 

His mum Rawan Saeh said: "He's that kid that asks about almost everything. He's very sensitive. We try not to watch too much TV but it was exposed all over the media."

That evening the pair were sat around the dinner table alongside Zane's five-year-old sister Tamara and their dad Hadi.

Mrs Saeh said: "We were just asking about his day and all of a sudden he asked what had happened [in London].

"I didn’t want to go into details – he asked if PC Palmer was an angel now and wanted to know if he was safe, and I said yes.

"He disappeared into his bedroom for almost two hours; I thought he had fallen asleep so I went to check on him."

The graphic designer was shocked to discover Zane finishing off a drawing of PC Palmer with wings, floating in the clouds next to Big Ben.

She said: "I was gobsmacked when I saw it, I had tears in my eyes. The only thing he said to me is that he didn’t know how to make it look like he was flying.

"He’s seen films about superheroes and in his head, that PC is a superhero now. He’s very artistic, the main thing he draws are dinosaurs."

The poem on the picture says: 

"Whistle whistle, don't be sad. I was killed by someone bad.

"Yesterday I was a policeman that looked after you.

"But now I'm a police angel that will watch over you, always and all through. 

"Whistle whistle, London I love you."

Above the smiling policeman are the words: "PC Keith Palmer, angel. RIP."

Mrs Saeh, who was born in Lebanon but grew up in New Zealand, said the attack was particularly upsetting for her because she had lost friends to terrorism before.

She said: "It really hit me. Not long ago there was an attack in Lebanon and our [previous] neighbour was killed by a bomb, and a close family friend was killed in the Bekaa bombings [in Lebanon last year].

"This brought it closer to home. I do worry every day, but you can't let it stop you."

She shared the picture on Facebook and was inundated with dozens of likes and shares from friends and strangers across three continents.

Zane's teachers at North Kidlington School also got in touch and asked to see the drawing, which Mrs Saeh said she plans to frame. 

People in Oxford paid tribute to the terror attack victims at a special vigil in the city centre yesterday evening.