Tag Archives: science fiction adventure

A family stands in front of their rebuilt home with fire-breathing rabbits. Two children saddle up giant rabbits for a new adventure while a government agent inspects mysterious glowing feathers near a black van.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 10

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!

Four rabbits were eventually delivered to the Kelly home, but not until after the crews had spent a good bit of time rebuilding it. The agents had seen the insurance and made sure everything was built to their specifications.

Mike had a new treehouse. The garage was expanded to hold three cars, along with lots of shop room for Destin to work on his next degree. He was doing something dangerous with poisonous snakes. They didn’t scare him anything like facing up to the giant rabbit, and the other little monsters they’d handled.

While Mike called his Fireball, and it went almost everywhere with him, fierce and loyal to the boy, Destin called his Jeremy and tried to get Maria to call hers Nippy, but she’d have none of it. She returned hers, citing that the Kelly family was more than she could handle at the moment. She wanted a cat and was going to stick to that. Mr. Red said he had the perfect cat in mind for her, but she refused that as well, knowing that anything coming from the agents was likely to try and tear her head off, and she was right about that.

Destin took Jeremy to the school and kept him in his classroom most of the time. Every once in a while, when his class was being particularly good, he’d take Jeremy out, and put him on the counter, and tickle him until he turned red, and blew fire into the room. The first couple of times, he set off the sprinklers, but he learned the trick over time and could get a blast of flame small enough not to set them off.

He’d say “You wanna see him?” and that’s all it took. He could get an entire class’s attention when he wanted to. As a student, you paid attention when Destin was teaching. The man had a fire breathing atomic bunny. You paid attention and you aced your quizzes.

Annie kept one of the bunnies. She wanted the runt and looked for the smallest one she could find. She called him Big Al and kept him in her backpack all the time. She wasn’t allowed to take him to school, but she was able to take him everywhere else.

The family went everywhere with their new pets. Fireball, Jeremy and Big Al went with them to the beach, to the mountains, and to the city.

They took an entire suitcase of carrots with them when they went out. No sense fooling around there.

Mr. Red and Mr. Green visited from time to time. It was useful to have the agents around, even if they felt like they were being watched all the time.

They fell into a routine. Destin would tease his students with his rabbit, Annie would use hers to terrorize any boy who was bullying her, and Mike would occasionally set his loose, just to give the local cops a workout. Mike also learned how to grow his own prize carrots. Monster carrots. At record his largest carrot was over three hundred-fifty pounds, and capable of taking his rabbit from a full-grown monster down to its regular bunny size in five minutes.

The trick to getting the rabbits to grow to enormous size wasn’t to get them mad or to starve them but to tickle their bellies. Mike had mastered the ability to grow his to just the perfect size for riding through the woods. He and Annie would ride them back and forth from their house to their father’s school, then with a carrot or two, hidden in the back shed or in the lawnmower shed at the school, they would shrink the rabbits back down to size and hide them in their backpacks.

One day after school, Mr. Green showed up at Destin’s classroom.

“Hello there Mr. Green,” said Destin.

“Destin, hello. I’ve got something I want you to look at.”

“Sure, I’ll take a look. What is it?”

Mr. Green had a handful of feathers. “We found these in the middle of a crop circle south of town.”

“Do those happen outside of England?”

“Oh, they happen. Atypical. Can you identify them?”

“Let’s look at them under the microscope.”

He took the feathers and put one under the microscope. He focused, and then looked up.

“I don’t think it’s anything to worry about.”

“What?”

“It seems like you have yourself some chickens.”

“Chickens.”

Mr. Red came through the door.

“It’s worse than we thought,” said Mr. Green.

“Worse what?”

“Chickens. We have chickens.”

“What’s wrong with that?” said Destin.

“Chickens are the worst kind of news.”

Annie and Mike were listening at the window.

“What does it mean?”

“I don’t know, but it’s the third sighting of chicken feathers we’ve seen near UFOs in the last ten days.”

“Well we’ve got to get right on that, then don’t we?” said Mike.

He and Annie put their rabbits down and tickled them. They grew to the size of small dinosaurs. Then the kids pulled saddles and utility vests from their backpacks. They put on the vests. The pockets had different kinds of tools, and flashlights in them. They tossed the saddles on the rabbits, which fastened under each of the rabbit’s front legs, and pulled themselves up.

“Let’s ride!” said Annie, “Where’s that crop circle?”

“Right this way,” said Mr. Green.

The kids galloped off towards the end of the street. In the distance, they could see the agent’s van parked on the other side of the hill.

The rabbits jumped over it and vanished into the field beyond.

A giant fire-breathing rabbit stands on a football field, facing a massive carrot dangling from a futuristic aircraft. A father and son watch as the rabbit shrinks back to normal size, while government agents approach.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 9

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!

Mrs. Orange pulled the van into a large black hanger hidden off the road. Maria watched as they went through sign after sign that said no trespassing and ‘Use of deadly force is authorized,’ and ‘do not enter on pain of death,’ and ‘private property.’ There were a couple of signs that this was government property, but they were closer to the street.

They pulled into the hanger, and inside was a small industrial complex. There was a line of vans, other agents here and there, a helicopter, and something else that looked a little different, and maybe had a camouflage covering on it. It was hard to tell.

As soon as they arrived, people started to unload the rabbits from the van. Maria was pretty sure that there wasn’t enough room to keep them all in the van. She watched as more and more of them were unloaded.

Mr. Red looked down at his watch. “Mike’s already chiming in. They’ve spotted the rabbit.”

“Let’s get rolling then,” said Mr. Green They pulled back the camouflage cover off the larger vehicle. It looked like a long rectangular craft. No wings, and no wheels. It was standing on little stubby legs. It looked like it had a large cargo area towards the back and good seating towards the front inside of a large chamber that could see everywhere through a wrap-around windshield. Mr. Red got on board, followed by Mr. Green. Mr. Green was about to sit down when Mrs. Orange pushed him out of the pilot seat and sat down. “We’ll have none of that!” she said. “I’m flying this round!” Maria and Annie got on board and strapped themselves in.

Mrs. Orange hit a button, and the whole place lit up. It took off from the ground, and soared out of the hanger, and up into the sky.

“Woah!” said Annie. She pressed her face against the window.

“Can anyone see us?” asked Maria.

“Not anymore,” said Mrs. Orange. She hit a switch, and everything rippled around them for a second. “Now we’re completely invisible.”

She turned the ship and headed back towards town.

“Where are they?” said Mrs. Orange. “It’s not like we’re going to miss a giant rampaging rabbit anyway.”

“Southwest,” said Mr. Red. “I’m linking the navigation system up to Mike’s transmitter. Each time he gives an update, you’ll get a course correction.”

“Thank you, sir,” said Mrs. Orange. “I’ve got him on the monitor now.”

Maria looked over her shoulder. There was a monitor there, with Destin and Mike on it, standing before the giant rabbit.

“How can you get that shot?” asked Maria.

“Satellites,” was all Mrs. Orange would tell her.

They flew across the land.

A readout next to the satellite camera feed showed their progress towards Mike’s beacon, which lit out again, and changed position.

The rabbit leaned in and sniffed at Destin’s face.

Destin froze.

It turned and sniffed at Mike.

Mike froze.

It licked Mike from head to foot.

Mike reached out and scratched the bunny under the chin. It closed its eyes and leaned into the scratch.

“That’s it,” said Destin.

The rabbit turned back to Destin and leaped over them.

Police cars, ambulances, and fire trucks were starting to arrive. Their sirens blared in the distance but were getting closer. 

“Dad, we’ve got to get him away from the road. We can’t let the cops get him, or the firemen.”

“Why?”

“He’s already this tall, how big do you want him to grow if they start shooting fire hoses at him?”

Destin considered this for a moment. “Okay, which way?”

“Back to school.”

Destin got back in his car and cranked it. Mike jumped in beside him, and he took off, first toward the rabbit, running into his toes. He peeled around and headed for the school. The giant rabbit was close behind him. It crushed trees, and parked cars all along the way, giving the police and fire departments plenty to do.

“There’s the school!” said Mike. They pulled around behind it. The bunny jumped, clearing the school building and landed on the football field. It seemed to have grown again.

Destin pulled the car up onto the running track and started to circle the football field. The rabbit chased them for a moment, and then jumped into the middle, watching them circle around and around.

Destin pulled to a stop just as Mrs. Orange flew over the school, and dropped their invisibility field. It shimmered in the sky and appeared there.

Mike’s phone rang. He answered it “Mom?”

“It’s us up here,” she said.

“Okay.” He hung up on her.

The rabbit roared.

Fire licked the sky.

Mrs. Orange pulled to the left to avoid the flame.

Mr. Red hit a button, and a panel on the bottom of the craft opened.

“What was that?” asked Maria.

“What’s that?” said Mike, his finger pointing into the air.

From the bottom of the craft, the bay opened. There was too much light to see. It blinded the rabbit, and Mike and Destin had to look away. Lowering from it on a massive cable was the giant carrot from the science expo they’d seen earlier in the day. It looked like it weighed, at least, two hundred pounds.

The rabbit saw it and jumped on it.

It missed but knocked the giant carrot loose from the cable. It shot towards the earth and landed point-down on the football field.

Mike ran towards the giant carrot.

The rabbit ran for it as well.

Mike leaped up and grabbed for it, but it was way too heavy for him. He yanked it, and it pulled a little, but not much. He and Destin struggled with it, but it was firmly in the ground.

“Here it is!” he yelled.

The rabbit ran to him. It sniffed Mike. It sniffed the carrot, then grabbing the carrot in its mouth, it pulled it free and started to crunch on it.

Its color faded quickly to white.

Its eyes stopped glowing.

It shrank to the size of a normal rabbit and jumped into Mike’s arms.

Mrs. Orange landed the craft, which was hardly a helicopter if you could call it that, on the football field.

Maria ran out to Mike, as did Destin and Annie. They were all on the field, with the rabbit when Mr. Red and Mr. Green walked up.

“We owe the two of you a debt of thanks,” said Mr. Green.

“Without your help, there’s no telling how much more damage these rabbits would have done today,” said Mr. Red.

“Is there anything we can do for you?” asked Mr. Green.

Destin was about to say something when Mike stepped forward.

“Can we keep one?”

“Of the rabbits?” said Mr. Green.

“No one else has a fire-breathing rabbit.  I’d take care of it.”

“Yeah, we want a pet. We were trying to come up with what we wanted,” said Annie.

“Annie, really?” said Maria.

“We’ll consider it,” said Mr. Green.

“I’d love to have one for the school,”  said Destin.

“The school that was burned to the ground?” asked Mr. Red.

“Yes. They’ll have me teaching somewhere.”

“That they will. We’ll make sure of that,” said Mr. Green.

“We’ll see what we can do. The least we can do is offer you some compensation for all your troubles and reassurance that we’ll take care of you,” said Mr. Red. “We’re going to make sure this school is rebuilt.”

Mr. Green sat down with Mike. “What are you going to call him?”

“Fireball,” said Mike.

Mr. Green ruffled Mike’s hair. “It’s Fireball then.