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A town in flames as fire-breathing rabbits wreak havoc. Inside a dark laboratory, a family and government agents watch the destruction on TV. A single rabbit, flickering between white and red fur, sleeps peacefully as helicopters circle outside.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 7

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits
Flames in crimson fur,
rabbits leap through fire and ash,
chaos hops away.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, The Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits!

Maria had the radio on as they drove.

“The attack of the atomic bunny rabbits, that’s what we’re calling it on channel fifteen. Rabbits of all kinds, sizes, and description are appearing all over town. Some are brown, but most are white and have a tendency to morph into a red furry bunny, with glowing eyes, that can spit fire a hundred feet. I am not joking folks, these things are all over town. We’ve been tracking them all day. There is a suspicion that they are lab bunnies from a nearby facility, a facility I might add that we have not been able to get a van near all day. We have three news vans lined up for the second we get clearance to do a story up there on the hill outside of town. For now, they are all sitting there waiting for further notice and doing stories about how they can’t get in. But that’s not all folks!”

The sound of one of the bunnies screaming and blowing its flaming breath came over the air.

“If you see one of them, do not go near it. They have a cunning curious personality, but they are also mischievous and once they get excited and start torching things around you, you had better just get out of the way. They’ve taken out, at least, three schools that we know of, and the science expo in town. We’re tracking them through restaurants and public parks.”

Maria took a corner and bumped over the curb.

“Did they get your school?”

“Yep,” said Mike. “It’s completely torched.”

“Both of them?”

Destin nodded.

“When did you first see one?”

“I found one on the way to school,” said Mike.

“One got in my box this morning,” said Destin.

“Then they are in the house!” said Maria.

“They could be, but they are all over.”

The newscaster was droning on. Maria turned off the radio.

She drove by a strip mall, where the rabbits were taking down a chicken sandwich shop. She pulled around another corner and stopped at a stop sign to watch ten or eleven of them cross the street in front of her.  They crossed and then went down a hill into the neighborhood.

Maria peeled out, and turned again, ignoring a stop sign this time, and heading for the house.

“You don’t think—“

“I don’t know,” said Maria.

“How you doin’ Annie?” said Mike.

Annie hugged him back.

They pulled up to the house. It was dark. The sun was going down, and they could tell there was no electricity on their street.

An upstairs window broke. Glass tumbled from it.

“Was that?”

Destin nodded. “That sounds like the back of the house too.”

Another window crashed. This time, it was the dining room at the front of the house. The glass shattered and fell into the azalea bushes in front.

Three rabbits fell out of the front window and doused the azaleas in flames. They toppled out, shook their ears and heads to clear them, and then hopped off.

There was another crash inside the house.

“How many of them are there?” said Destin.

“More than enough,” said Maria.

“Our house,” said Mike.

“Mommy!” said Annie.

They just watched as the building buckled, and half of the roof on the left side slid off and crashed to the ground.

The dust settled, and then the rabbits began to pour out of the top of the house. Three or four at a time, they leaped out and landed on the front lawn. Like a spewing water hose of fiery rabbits. They bounced in the yard and skittered in all directions.

“What are these things?” said Destin.

“I don’t know,” said Mike.

“We’ll take them up to the lab on the hill. What can we catch them in?”

“Trash cans,” said Mike.

“That’s not a bad idea.”

They peeled out, this time with the back of the van open. They slid by the hardware store, which was also overrun with rabbits, and picked up six metal garbage cans. Mike and Destin slid them into the back of the van.

“How do we catch them?” said Mike.

“That’s the easy part,” said Destin. “You and I have both held them today, and they are just lab bunnies having fun.”

“You think we can just pick them up?”

“I’ll bet we can.”

Destin knelt down and reached out. One of the bunnies stopped, and turned, then came to his hand, sniffing. He scratched it on the head and then picked it up to look at it.

“Here you go fella,” said Destin, and he lowered the rabbit into the trash can. It jumped a little, then got distracted by the sound of its little paws on the bottom of the can. Destin lidded the can, and he and Mike went on a hunt.

Mike grabbed two of them, maybe overdoing it for a moment, and brought them back. Maria opened the lids and allowed him to put them down in there and then closed them back up.

Annie wanted to help. “Soft,” she said. Mike helped her lift one more into another can as Destin came back with two more. They tied the cans shut with bungee cords, and then headed up the hill.

When they got to the laboratory, it was deadly silent. The fences, which operated with an electric fenced doorway on wheels was all mangled and torn to shreds. They drove through it to find cars overturned and the front doors to the lab hanging open. There were bunny prints in the pollen all around. There were no news crews, only empty news vans, left running.

Everyone got out, and Destin checked the rabbits. Some of the cans were warm, where one of them had been breathing a little fire. Most were still cool. He opened one up to find a little red-furred rabbit curled up asleep on the bottom of the can. He lifted it out, and it snuggled into his arms.

“Destin!” said Maria.

“It’s okay. I think this is the same little one I had with me this morning.”

She opened her mouth.

“I know, I know. Not exactly a good idea, right?”

“Yeah.”

“I know. Let’s go in.”

Destin took Annie’s hand with his free one, and Mike and Maria followed him into the laboratory.

It was a little dank, like lots of water had spilled. The electricity was out.

“Anybody has a flashlight?” said Maria.

“There’s one in the car. Mike, go out and grab it. It’s in the glove compartment.”

“Okay.”

Mike left them. Maria scoffed, but she wanted the flashlight. A moment later Mike came back with it. He turned it on and led the way.

“It looks like the bunnies came down this way.”

There were bunny prints everywhere, and lots of splashed water.

“I think you’re right.”

“Did you know anyone up here?” asked Maria.

“A couple of people. None of them ever mentioned anything like this.”

They made their way down the hall, and around into one of the main labs. They passed by the remains of the burned-out kitchen, and into the room where the original rabbit pen had been.

“This is it. It’s where it all started,” said Destin.

On one of the tables was a box of rabbit chow, and a fresh bail of grass, and a computer. On the computer’s case were long scratches.

The pen lay in pieces.

Lights flickered.

There was no one else there.

Then there was a sound.

A man stepped forward from the darkness around them.

“We need your help,” said Mr. Green.

“Green,” said Destin.

“I’m not sure how we can help.”

“The rabbits have infested much of the town. Any hopes of keeping this under wraps are long over. People are out of their homes.”

“We know. Our house too. Coming here seemed like all we had left.”

“Whatever they did here—“ said Mike.

“Is a tragedy,” said Mr. Green.

Mr. Green turned on a small television that was nearby on one of the desks in the room. It was wall to wall coverage of their little town.

Mike could hear helicopters in the distance somewhere.

“And it seems there’s no end in sight,” said one newscaster to another.

“That’s right, the rabbits seem to have taken over this little town. Rabbits, or whatever they are.”

“Did you see the claws?”

“Nothing compared to their teeth.”

“And I’m not talking about the fire. Fire crews are on the scene across town and every truck they have is in service somewhere.”

“As soon as they knock one out, they just move onto the next target of the rabbits.”

“Night is falling. Thousands of people out of power, houses and businesses burned down—“

“And cars.”

“That’s right tons of cars have been gutted and destroyed by the little creatures.”

They brought up an image of one, a rabbit leaping across someone’s back yard while breathing fire.

Mr. Green turned off the television.

“The only thing we have is that they don’t seem ready to leave town. We’ve got them in this general area,” said Mr. Green.

“Why would they stay?” asked Mike.

“I don’t know, and they seem to be getting crazier by the minute, more reckless and mischievous. Nervous maybe.”

“They’re hungry,” said Annie.

“Annie…” said Maria.

“What?” said Mr. Green. “What was that?”

Annie cleared her throat. “They’re hungry. We should get a bunch of carrots, big truck-fulls of carrots, and offer them to the rabbits. They’ve been naughty all day. They’ve got to be hungry.”

Mr. Red stepped in from the shadows. He was holding his earpiece to his ears. “What have we got to lose? Carrots are our best chance.” He listened for a moment, then spoke into his microphone. “Can we get it? A truck or two, yes, at least, that. Carrots yes, anything else that rabbits will eat. Bring it on.”

Mr. Red looked back up at everyone. “They’re on their way.”

They barricaded themselves into the laboratory. No one slept, but they did not cry or allow themselves to look upset. Their home destroyed, the school destroyed, and only the hopes that a shipment of carrots would do the job, they raided what was left of the break room, and cobbled together dinner. The agents ate with them, sharing sandwiches from the truck. Someone had cards. Someone had dice. Before long they had all but forgotten about the rabbits.

Prof. Blue stood guard over the van with Mrs. Orange, ready to go at a moment’s notice. He held a dart rifle, and only had to tranquilize one rabbit who came too close. The rest were too busy with the rest of the town to worry about this place. They took the bunny in, who while sleeping was a calm white lab rabbit, and laid him on the desk in the van and surrounded him with an old black leather jacket. The rabbit snuggled in.

It didn’t understand that by day it was a fire-breathing menace, and a science experiment went wrong. For now, it was just a bunny, sleeping until morning.

Fire-breathing rabbits leap through a city, setting buildings and cars ablaze. A mother shields her daughter as a rabbit breathes fire from atop a burning vehicle, while government agents observe the destruction.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 6

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits
Flames in crimson fur,
rabbits leap through fire and ash,
chaos hops away.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, The Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits!

The kids in the jumping house didn’t know what hit them. They were in there, jumping inside the head of an enormous clown. Mike and Destin could see them through the eyes as the bunnies converged upon it. They bounded up, and up through the nose of the clown, jumped into the giant clown’s face, and were inside it.

The kids were jumping, and then they were surrounded by fluffy red bunny rabbits jumping with them.

Destin and Mike stopped.

Mr. Phillips looked another way. “They’re in the popcorn maker,” he said. Destin and Mr. Phillips looked at each other, nodded and then Mr. Phillips ran toward the popcorn maker.

The bunnies in the jumping clown jumped with the kids. There was a crowd forming around it, and the bunnies copied the kids, jumping into the air, and then landing on their backs with their legs splayed out.

“I’m going in,” said Mike.

“No, Mike,” said Destin, but he was already climbing through the nose.

He pushed himself in, and wiggled his way through one of the inflated nostrils, and popped through into the mass of kids and bunnies all bouncing around. The bunnies started hopping even faster, and soon they began trying all kinds of different tricks, bouncing off the floor, and the walls, this way and that.

Mike grabbed for one, was it his?

It eluded him and slipped free towards another kid. Then he rolled to the left and tried to grab another bunny, but that slipped free of him and started bouncing between the floor and the ceiling of the big domed inflatable. Mike counted there were seven or eight bunnies in the jumping playhouse and six or eight kids. Things were moving around a lot.

“Mike!” said Destin. He pressed his face against the plastic see-through eyes of the inflatable.

Mike was jumping with the rabbits. They surrounded him and we’re jumping in a circle around him. Together, all at the same time, the rabbits began jumping as one. Mike would go up while they were going down. He’d take a big leap, and they would take a bigger leap. He’d go up four feet, and land on his feet, bending his knees to clear a higher jump, and they would do the same, but they’d put the power of their rabbity back legs into it and jump even higher, almost holding hands in a circle around him.

To Destin’s left, the popcorn maker exploded. Fire shot from the rabbits who were climbing in it and the popcorn was popping in the tin before it normally would have been ready.

Popcorn was everywhere.

People started to run, and it was while Destin was looking away from that the rabbits surrounding Mike all turned around and started breathing fire onto the walls of the bouncy clown. The plastic melted, burned, peeled away, and soon they were bouncing in an open area surrounded by melted plastic walls. The side blew out, and the bunnies all left Mike behind and bounced out of the playhouse and over the heads of the people gathered around.

Mike caught up with his dad and they ran for it.

Mr. Phillips brushed the popcorn off his body. He stumbled back into a booth for drinking birds and little water toys.

It was like a wave. Little red rabbits bounding through the expo, leaving a trail of fire and destruction in their wake.

Outside, the van pulled up, and Mr. Red and Mr. Green stepped out of it. They sauntered into the Expo, and took notes, holding their phones to their faces and speaking into them.

“Minor damage, here at the School Science Expo. The bunnies are definitely here, or at least, they were,” said Mr. Green.

“Evidence suggests that their numbers are growing. They’ll double soon,” said Mr. Red.

“They can do that?”

“According to the lab, they can do a lot of things.”

“Sir, were you a witness?” said Mr. Green.

Destin turned, and he and Mike were face to face with Mr. Green.

“I should think so,” said Destin. “They’ve been all over town this morning.”

Mike looked up at his father, who was casually talking about the rabbits now.

“You seem to know a good bit then,” said Mr. Green.

“One snuck into my class materials this morning.”

“And into my backpack on the way to school,” said Mike.

Mr. Green turned and knelt down to talk to Mike. “You say on your way to school then?”

“Yeah, these rabbits were all over our neighborhood.”

Mr. Green looked up, “Your son sir?”

“Yep, he’s mine,” said Destin.

“You’ve got a smart boy there Mr. Kelly.”

“How did you—“

“Know your name? We’ve met before. Probably will again. You get in a lot of trouble scientifically speaking.”

“Do I then?”

“You have no idea.”

“Is my dad a secret agent?” asked Mike.

“Kid, your father has helped us more times than he knows.”

Mr. Green winked, and gave a short salute, and said “Mr. Kelly, we’ll be in touch later,” then he and Mr. Red were sweeping from the room, tracking the rabbits as they went.

“I wonder what all that was about?” said Destin.

“Dad, you’re a superhero!”

“Of course, I am.”

Maria waited in line, the car idling while she was waiting for Annie to come out of her preschool class. The sun was hot, and she was waiting in a spot where the sun was just hitting her in the face between the visor and the rearview mirror where you could only block it by craning your neck around in just the wrong way. She took off her sunglasses and, squinted then put them back on.

The doors opened, and children began to spill out, heading for various cars when one of them was knocked over by a high jumping rabbit and went sprawling to the ground.

One of Annie’s teachers shrieked and watched as another of the rabbits jumped up on Annie’s head and looked left and right, its fur as red as a radish.

Horns honked. Parents screamed. Car doors slammed and flew open, and then parents and kids ran different directions. Teachers closed their eyes and the rabbits ran everywhere. They were all over the place.

Maria jumped across the street and ran for the rabbits.

One jumped over the mailbox and kicked it on the way by.

Maria backhanded one jumping for her. It landed on the ground and rolled away, scampering under another car.

She kicked the one standing on Annie’s head.

It squealed and fell to the ground and then hopped into an open backpack.

Annie ran for her mother.

One of the rabbits cut loose and blew fire that destroyed a compact car. It exploded, the engine blowing the hood off. It landed several feet away.

Another rabbit jumped on the remains of a tree stump and roared like a lion, bearing its razor-sharp fangs before breathing fire.

Maria got Annie in the car while the rabbits were chasing the other children. She slammed Annie’s door, kicked another rabbit on the way to her door. She pulled her close and another rabbit landed on the hood of the car. It twitched its nose, scratched behind its ears, then its fur brightened up, then it roared and blew fire up over the car.

Maria hit the gas and peeled out. The rabbit flew up over the windshield and off the car. It landed on the street, shaking its head and blew another plume of flame as the cars around it screeched around them.

She hit the gas and peeled around the corner.

Another rabbit landed on the windshield and rolled down to the hood of the car. It bellowed and screeched, and blew fire into the air.

Annie screamed in the back seat.

Maria pulled hard right, and the rabbit rolled off the car, landing in a bush by the side of the road.

“Where are these things coming from?”

Annie got quiet.

“Annie?”

“Mom…”

Maria turned around. One of them was in the back seat. Then she saw two. She pulled the car to a stop and flung open the doors.

One rabbit gave her a look and darted out of the car. The other looked up at her, blinking in the sun. She grabbed it by the scruff of the neck and hurled it away from the car. It spun in the air and spewed flame as it went before landing on the ground thirty feet away.

She jumped back in the car and turned on the radio.

“The science expo was the scene of chaos today as what appeared to be fire-breathing rabbits overran it and took down some of the larger booths. The so-named Mr. Science had this to say. ‘Mutated rabbits, I’ve never seen anything like it before. They were everywhere.’ Most of the booths are now lost to the flame. The fire department has been on the scene. Most of the booths are a complete loss.”

“Destin,” she said. She had her phone out and was dialing his number before she knew what she was doing.

He answered.

“Destin!”

“We’re all right,” said Destin.

“And Mike?”

“I’ve got him here with me.”

“Did you see it?”

“Yeah, we saw it. Fire breathing rabbits. Doesn’t make any sense.”

“They’re all over town. I just threw one out of the car.”

“It’s odd,” he said. “I don’t think they are that harmful.”

“What? They burned down the science expo!”

“I know, I know, but they were almost playing the whole time.”

“They are little monsters!”

Destin exchanged a glance with Mike.

“I know, I know.”

“What are we going to do about them?”

“We? I don’t know.”

“Think about it. Where are you?”

“We’re a couple of blocks from the expo now. We are on a bus back to Eagle Lake Middle School. I’m taking Mike back there with me instead of sending him back to his school. Worked it out with his teacher Phillips.”

“Good.”

“I think these little guys are fascinating. Had one in class this morning.”

“You what?”

“Had one in class. Found it on the way in. They’re almost docile.”

“Except when they are trying to blow something up.”

“True, and I ran into some of those crazy government guys again.”

“The agent guys?”

“Yeah, Mr. Green, Mr. Red. Funny names, like they are men in black or something. They thought they knew something.”

“Yeah, well I know something.”

“What?”

“I’m headed over to your school now.”

“We’re pulling around the corner now, we’ll beat you by a few minutes.”

“Just be ready to roll when I do get there. We are getting away from here as fast as possible.”

“We will.”

Destin hung up his cell phone. They were pulling around the cornerback to the school. It was already on fire.

A window burst in front of them, and a red, laughing, happy rabbit was there, spouting flame from its nostrils, then it ducked back in the building.

Mutant red-furred rabbits with glowing eyes in a futuristic lab. One rabbit breathes fire, while others leap. Scientists in lab coats stand shocked in the background as a mysterious light bathes the room.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 1

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits
Flames in crimson fur,
rabbits leap through fire and ash,
chaos hops away.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, The Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits!

“The rabbits look like they are doing well this evening,” said Dr. Barnes.

“I suppose they are,” said Dr. Roberts.

The laboratory was large, stark and white. A glowing orb of energy hung low from the ceiling. Reflectors surrounded it and concentrated beams of light on a fabricated patch of grass in the middle of the room. On the grass, a dozen healthy white rabbits hopped and played. They munched on celery, carrots, and lettuce from two larger bowls. They bounded around and chased each other.

Barnes watched them, clipboard in hand while Roberts checked a readout on his laptop. He was jotting down things, making little tick marks in different columns.

Roberts put his glasses up on his head while he read some of the data coming in. Transmitters behind their ears sent in data.

Some of the rabbits were playing a little rough, pouncing on each other. They smacked each other with their large hind feet and rolled around a lot.

“They are becoming more aggressive,” said Roberts.

“I agree,” said Barnes. “The light is doing its job well, though.”

“At least, we aren’t working on mind control anymore.”

“No doubts there. The Television industry has that pretty well bottled up.”

“Did you see the game last night?”

“No.”

Barnes searched through the pocket of his lab coat to retrieve a new pen. He had just gone dry.

“How did we get into this anyway?”

“You mean you never wanted to grow up to become a mad scientist?”

Barnes shrugged. “Are the lights too high?”

“They seem to check out okay. I think we’re still within the parameters of our test. Wouldn’t be much good if we lost that.”

“I’m not sure it should matter. We haven’t seen that much of a change already in their temperaments.”

“True. Tonight is an interesting example, though.”

“Not much more than a little roughhousing. I think they are bored.”

“Possible.”

“Maybe we could throw in some enrichment? A couple of toys to get their attention.”

“Sorry, that would invalidate the test for sure. No, we’ve got to ride it out.”

Barnes put his clipboard down and looked on at Roberts’s computer station.

“This reading is a little high,” said Barnes.

Roberts waved it off. “Not likely to cause much of an impact.”

“Are you sure?”

“Positively. I think that’s a result of them getting too riled up tonight.”

One of the rabbits leaped up, three feet in the air and landed on the other side of the enclosure.

“What was that?” said Roberts.

They both looked, but in just a moment could no longer tell which rabbit had made the jump.

“Interesting,” said Roberts.

“I’m getting my lunch,” said Barnes. “Can I get you anything?”

“I don’t think so.”

Barnes nodded and made his way down to the lab’s lunchroom. It was a cramped back room with a table, sink, refrigerator, microwave, and one chair, yet enough table for five or six. Barnes remembered many nights coming in here to eat while they were waiting for an experiment to finish. There used to be two chairs, but now there was just the one. He couldn’t remember where it had gone to.

He pushed his way past a filing cabinet, closing the middle drawer with his hip as he passed it. This had become second nature to him, and he no longer realized he did it anymore. It slammed with a rusty thud.

He pulled open the fridge and got out his lunch. It was a sandwich and some soup in a Thermos.  He opened the Thermos, and a waft of warm air greeted his nose. He set that down on the little table and opened the sandwich. He slid that into the microwave and turned it on. Beneath the sandwich, a long strip of torn foil still remained.

Barnes walked out on it, in search of the bathroom. The sandwich would be waiting for him when he got back.

The sandwich turned and burned. It began to spark, and then it caught fire. Flames burst out from the microwave, and the door flew open. Now fire was belching from the open door.

The fire alarm blared.

Roberts looked up from what he was doing.

“What was that?”

The alarm continued to ring. Small lights around the lab began to blink.

Then the microwave completely exploded.

The burned sandwich covered the walls. The refrigerator toppled over, and three months of leftover containers fell into the floor.

Part of the wall was on fire.

Somewhere beyond there was a larger explosion.

Barnes popped out of the bathroom.

“What was that?” he said.

He ran down the hall, past the burning break room, and down the hall to the laboratory.

Pushing open the doors, he found Roberts face down by one of the tables. Barnes checked his pulse. Roberts was still alive. “Come on there Roberts,” Barnes smacked the side of Roberts’s face. He didn’t come around.

He looked up.

The lights were pouring down on the rabbits.

“That’s not right,” he said. “That’s way too high.”

Rabbits were beginning to cook.

Their fur grew, and got bushier, becoming more of a candy apple red color. Their eyes began to glow.

Barnes thought it was just the lights coming down, making beady eyes beadier. Then one jumped.

It flew through the air and landed on Barnes’s face. Then it kicked, pushing off and sent Barnes toppling to the ground.

“What the…”

Barnes fell back and hit the ground, clattering into a table that was covered with papers. He flew over the top of it and sprawled on the floor behind it. When he sat up, holding his hand over a small cut on his forehead, the rabbit was actually opening the gate for the other rabbits. It kicked the gate open, with what now looked like a clawed foot with deep red fur, and they all began to stream out of it. They ran over Barnes, each softly kicking him in the face with their big furry feet as they crossed the room.

“Hey!”

Their leader, the others were still in the process of turning gradually darker and darker red, looked him in the eye, with fiery white-hot yellow pupils. It opened its mouth and breathed a jet stream of fire on him, singing his hair before turning and bounding down the hall.

The bunnies jumped through the fire from the break room, bounced off a turn towards the front door, past the bathroom and then jumped into the iron front doors, and could not move them. They launched themselves, into the doors, and bounced off, or landed with silly looks of confusion on their furry faces. Then they started to gasp and gather air into their lungs before spitting a stream of flame on the door to heat it up.

One of the bunnies passed out, but the rest kept concentrating on heating the door up. The unconscious one’s fur returned to its original white, but only for a moment, then it blinked, looked around, woke up and started turning fiery red again. A moment later it was jumping and belching at the doors with the rest of them.

The doors came loose, and landed in a twisted pile of metal, surrounded by the ash of other burned materials.

In the lab, Barnes shook Roberts, who came around.

“What happened?”

“The rabbits are loose.” It wasn’t Barnes.

They both looked up, and standing above them were two official-looking men dressed in dark suits.

“Doctor Barnes, Doctor Roberts,” said one of them. “We’re going to need to confiscate all this material you have around you.”

“Who are you?” said Barnes.

“I’m Mr. Green, this is Mr. Red,” said Green.

“No, I mean who are you?”

“There’s no time for that. This building is about to come down.”

There was smoke coming from down the hall. The fire had spread beyond the break room.

“Don’t worry,” said Red. “The Fire Department has already been notified. Do you have any knowledge of which direction the animals may be going.”

Barnes shook his head.

“We’ll be in touch,” said Red.

Agents Red and Green made their way out of the lab, and into the night. Barnes and Roberts watched as other agents, who only identified themselves as Mr. Yellow and Miss Purple, took files, and destroyed computer records with some form of a handheld light-up device while the Fire Department doused the flames.

A big rabbit footprint appeared on Barnes’s face, where it had kicked him. It stung, red like a sunburn.

Mr. Yellow snapped a photo of the footprint and sent it to Mr. Green with his phone.

“Thank you, sir,” he says as the flash goes off in Barnes’s face.

Outside, Mr. Green and Mr. Red survey the grounds outside and the remains of the front door. They look around, through their scanning devices, and then shake their heads. They don’t see any sign of the rabbits.

Next to the fire truck, parked on the curb is a large silver van. Mr. Green and Mr. Red knock on the backdoors, which open. Inside Mrs. Orange is ready to drive, and Prof. Blue was looking over the data coming in from everyone’s scanners.

“Can you make any sense of it Blue?” said Green. “Our scanners aren’t picking up much of anything.”

“I’m starting to see a pattern,” said Blue. He slipped his hand into his pocket for a bite of chocolate, offered it to Green and Red, who refused, then stuck it in his own mouth and chewed while he thought. “They seem headed down into the valley. At least, that’s what this shows. The trails you are sending back peter out thirty feet from the door.”

“How is that possible?”

“If I knew that, we’d have the little devils back already, wouldn’t we?”

Green and Red looked at each other.

“Don’t worry,” said Blue. “If I’m right, they won’t stay hidden for long.”

Away from the lab, the rabbits rocketed through the underbrush and set it on fire. They fired their way down alleys and between houses as they reached the valley. Their businesses stopped and the village began. They nestled into backyards, tree houses and garages, finding cool spots to curl up and nestle down for the evening. Their fires cooled, and their eyes darkened, no longer glowing with fiery light, to wait for the morning.