Tag Archives: supernatural creatures

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.

A group of fire-breathing rabbits gathers in a science expo, their glowing eyes and fiery breath setting booths ablaze. People flee in panic while a young boy and his father stand in stunned amazement.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 5

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 were on the move. They snuck between the buildings. They romped through the bushes, and they stayed out of sight for the most part, but when they were obvious, they were really obvious, and people were reporting sightings all over the place.

“911 emergency… Rabbits Miss?” they would say.

“Really, red rabbits hopping down the street? A whole pack of them? Yes, I’ve got that noted here. Can jump ten feet, can they? I’ll mark that down as well. Where are they? I see.”

They’d type into their computers and ask “Were they dark red or just sort of pink?” and that would get a laugh sometimes if a nervous one.

In the control van, Mrs. Orange was cranking up the engine, and Prof. Blue was feeding all that data into his computer.

“Where are they headed?” said Mr. Green.

“It looks like there is a kid’s science expo down at the Free Town Convention Center. It looks like they are headed that way.”

The buses idled by the street in front of the Kid’s Science Expo, all thirty-seven or more of them. Behind them in the parking lot, there was a sea of yellow buses. Kids were everywhere. Some students stood in lines, getting directions from their teachers while others were in circles talking.

Mr. Phillips and Mike stepped off their bus. They only had a few other students with them. The rabbit rode in, tucked into Mike’s backpack.

Mike’s backpack started to twitch. Mike checked on him. The rabbit was no longer sleeping, but standing at attention, and looking around, like it was listening to the air, or smelling the hot dog carts that were way down the street. Its ears were like little radars, working independent of each other, and taking in as much as possible around them.

They walked through the crowd.

“How are we going to find your Dad?” said Mr. Phillips.

“Don’t worry. He’s got a big crowd.”

“Keep an eye out anyway.”

They made their way to the front entrance. Inside there were lines of tables, rows, and rows where all kinds of experiments both for and my kids were on display. Lots of kits. Everything from hydroponic gardening to raising tadpoles was here. Over in the corner, someone was beating on the bottom of a trashcan that was fitted with a plastic sheet on one end with a hole cut in the bottom, sending large smoke rings across the room.

At the center of the expo was a carrot. It was massive, some fifteen feet tall, and standing on end, the larger end floating above them, supported by cables. It was surrounded by kids, all reaching out to touch it. In front of it, were the kids who grew it, and a lady handing out baby carrot snack bags.

There were twisty drinking birds, potato clocks, robots made out of tin cans, sparklers, and piles and piles of books and workbooks. In the middle of the trading floor was a giant jungle gym where teenagers were clipping into a rope and following it through an obstacle course, that went up into the air above the rest of the exhibits. There were a bunch of kids up in it at the top looking down at everyone coming through the door and waving at them. Near the back, someone was high-dive jumping, next to two or three jumping houses, one of which was shaped like a gigantic whale and one of them was shaped like a giant clown’s head. You could see kids inside bouncing up and down by looking through the large clear eyes.

Mike couldn’t believe what he was seeing, but he thought that maybe it was places like this that helped his Dad keep the attention of his students so well.

They walked the isles, looking at plant systems and fish tanks, through stacks and stacks of books and in and out of one exhibit after another. Mr. Phillips was on high alert, missing the fun for looking for Destin, and Destin was doing the same as he led his troop through the other end of the gallery.

No one was showing rabbits doing anything out of the ordinary.

Destin allowed his students, who were younger and all planned to meet their parents here at the end of the day instead of returning on the bus, to split up and look at whatever it was they wanted to. Many stayed with him on the off chance they might see the rabbit fire it up again, but just as many were ready and willing to escape from their teacher for the afternoon with the expectation that they would tell the class the following Monday what they had seen.

They were wandering the aisles, and looking here and there when Mike thought to text his father.

Destin’s phone buzzed in his pocket, he looked at it.

“Meet us by the Mr. Science booth,” it said.

Behind him was a huge display of giant, oversized carrots, each as large as a child. They were stood up on end and had little lights shining down on them.

Destin looked around, then he texted back a quick “OK.” He turned the corner, his students still with him, and saw the Mr. Science booth. It was tall and black, covered with green lettering, and complex-looking equations. In front of it was Mr. Science himself, who was in life an actor who hosted children’s television shows. He had a bunch of kids gathered in front of him while he showed off a pair of large plasma balls.

The lighting inside of them was bright purple and zapping from the center to the glass spheres as he ran his hands over them. The kids were in awe, but happy to start pawing the plasma balls on their own while he explained the principals going on inside.

Mike and Mr. Phillips were standing to the left of the crowd as Destin came up.

“Hello there,” said Destin. He ruffled Mike’s hair.

“Hi Dad.”

“Hello Mr. Kelly,” said Mr. Phillips.

“Hello Mac,” said Destin.

Mr. Phillips laughed. “Destin,” he said.

“Got your rabbit?”

“I feel like I’m doing something illegal or something.”

“I know. Doesn’t make any sense, does it?”

“Not a lot. Fire breathing rabbits.”

“I love science.”

Mike felt it in his backpack, the rabbit was twitching.

“Hey,” said Mike. It’s moving.

“Mine is too,” said Destin. “I can feel him in there,”

Destin’s box shook and fell to the floor. Destin grabbed for it and pulled it back up. Mr. Phillips helped him hold it up.

“This one looks just like Mike’s,” said Mr. Phillips.

“I thought he might.”

In the corners of the expo, the rabbits were finding their way in. One of them slipped in through the back door while a trucker was offloading something for a big banquet that was going to happen later that night. Another one made his way in through one of the back doors of the expo, next to the concession stand as someone was coming from taking a quick break. Several more came in through the front door. Whenever anyone saw them, they would stand as still as possible until the person’s eyes just passed over them, then they would move on. In this way, they crept through the expo, hiding behind displays, near stacks of books, and in plain sight until they were all congregated around the Mr. Science booth.

Their fur was deep, dark and red with the occasional darker patch. They hopped together in an open space on the trading floor. Destin’s box shook again, and the rabbit freed itself scurrying out to the gathering of rabbits as Mike’s did the same, tearing itself out of the bag, and out into the floor with the rest of them.

“Woah!” said Mike. “Come back here!”

Mike went to grab for his rabbit, but Destin held him back.

“Dad!”

“Hang on, son.”

“But…”

“This might be interesting, watch.”

The rabbits gathered into a circle and began to stamp their feet in unison. Everyone around them stopped talking. Mr. Science stopped talking. People started to back up, but they also started to crowd around which created this concentrated circle of people about twenty feet away from the rabbits.

There were about ten of them there, including Mike and Destin’s rabbits. All around them, people started to hoot and grunt, as more rabbits were jumping into the crowd, hitting people in the legs, jumping up on their shoulders, and then out into the circle with the rest of the rabbits, then the pattern changed. Instead of a steady beat, the rhythm changed up, and the rabbits began to thump out a soft pattering song.

“What are they doing?” said Mr. Phillips.

“That!” said Mike, as the first one belched a stream of fire into the air, and the rest of them began to follow suit.

The crowd parted as the rabbits began to breathe fire and reign down terror in the middle of the expo. Rabbits jumped and blew scorching tongues of flame across the exhibits. They tickled each other and punched and seemed to giggle. They jumped up and down and punched their little fists in the air, and gave each other hugs, and then ran around in circles jumping over each other and running this way and that, blowing fire on a plant here, setting fire to a stack of books there, and having a great time with it all before concentrating together to take the Mr. Science booth down together in a towering inferno of flame.

Mr. Science jumped out of the way, doing a kind of a crazy cartwheel off his own stage. Mike could hear him saying “Is anybody getting this on film?”

About five hands shot up around them, each a person experiencing their life through applications on their cell phone rather than with their own eyes. Some of them were dangerously closer to the rabbits than they realized. Some sensible folks were actually screaming and running for their lives.

Mr. Science cartwheeled away from another onslaught of bunny firepower saying “Send me your video links later through your favorite social media sites!”

“Bunnies!” he yelled as they finished torching his booth to the ground. The plasma balls tipped over and exploded when they hit the concrete floor. Then the rabbits split up.

There was a gasp from the crowd.

People split apart from each other as the rabbits started bounding in all directions. One jumped upon a man’s head, then catapulted itself onto another woman, jumping from head to head. Others scurried underfoot, knocking people over and tripping them up.

“Red bunnies!” said one lady.

“Fire breathing rabbits!” said another.

“Of doom!” said someone else.

The rabbits ran through the other exhibits, setting everything on fire left and right. People not so much, but things in general, lots of paper and posters and signs went down, and not for lack of trying, it didn’t spread that far. Most displays landed on concrete floors and went out. That’s not to say that the initial blaze itself wasn’t spectacular, which it was. Destin and Mike watched as they fanned out across the expo floor from one booth to another, jumping up to stand on people’s heads, chasing each other, and setting things ablaze.

“Where are they going?” said Mike.

“I don’t know,” said Destin, “but we’ve got to catch them!”

“Which way?”

“Anyway! Do you know which way yours went?”

“I don’t know, this way?”

Mike pointed over towards where the jumping houses were.

“Let’s go then! Lead on!”

A group of fiery rabbits leaps alongside a school bus as a teacher holds a glowing red rabbit on his shoulder. Inside the bus, students watch in amazement as the creatures keep pace with the vehicle.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 4

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!

As soon as it started, the spout of flame was over. The mirrors melted, but otherwise, nothing else was harmed, and Mr. Phillips pushed to stand up and brush himself off.

“What was that?” said Mr. Phillips, “Are you all right Mike?”

“Yeah, I think so.”

Mike came out of the stall, with his backpack over one shoulder, and the bunny now calms again with white fur. Come to think of it, the red never seemed to show a feeling from the rabbit, though Mike felt it was safe to assume it wouldn’t breathe fire again anytime soon.

“What is that, and where did you get it?”

“I don’t know, I think they are all over the place.”

“Fire breathing rabbits?”

“I don’t know.”

“It’s odd enough that it changes color, but the fact that it changes to white instead of brown or gray…”

“What?”

“I wonder if they were lab rabbits somewhere.”

“I don’t know.”

“So, I can’t take it away from you.”

“What?”

“I wouldn’t know where to put it, besides no one else at the school is going to believe we have a fire-breathing rabbit.”

“What are we going to do?”

“I think we’re going to call your father over at the High School.”

Mike swallowed.

Mr. Phillips pulled out his smartphone and slid his finger across it to wake it up. He scrolled through his contacts to find Mike’s dad and hit the call button. A few moments later there was an answer.

“Yes, Mr. Phillips? I assume you have my boy there?”

“Yes, I’ve got him. We are having an interesting morning here.”

“Does it involve a fire-breathing rabbit?”

“How did you know that?”

“Helps that I happen to have one here in my classroom at the moment.”

“There’s more than one of these things?”

“Sure, are you also taking your kids to the science fair this afternoon?” said Destin.

“Yes, I was. I mean with this rabbit, and if there are more…”

“I’ll have my kids there this afternoon as well. Why don’t you make sure Mike is with you, and bring his rabbit with you? I’ll bring mine, and we can compare.”

There was a swooshing sound from Destin’s end of the line.

“Mr. Kelly?”

“No problem, he just did it again. It seems to be a bit of a cycle, right?”

“Right.”

“Put my son on will you?”

“Sure.”

Mr. Phillips handed his phone over to Mike.

“Dad?”

“Mike, you keep that rabbit, right?”

“Yeah!”

“I mean it, keep it safe. Don’t let anyone take it from you. I’ll be at the science thing later this afternoon when you are on your field trip with Mr. Phillips. I want to compare our rabbits and see if we can tell anything then, okay?”

“You got it.”

“Keep him in your backpack. If anyone gives you grief about it, tell them that it’s part of an experiment and that Mr. Phillips has said to keep it upper wraps.”

“Okay.”

“I think if you keep him in the dark, he won’t change. Do you understand?”

“Yeah, okay.”

“You hear that Phillips?”

Mr. Phillips took the phone back from Mike. “Yeah, I got it. I’ll give him a pass.”

“That’s a start.”

“I want in on this,” said Phillips.

“Don’t you worry, I think there’s going to be enough of this to go around for all.”

“Sounds good.”

They hung up.

“All right Mike, let’s set you up with a pass.”

They went into the teacher’s lounge, and he wrote Mike out a pass. It instructed any teacher who wanted to see what was in his backpack, that Mr. Phillips was conducting an experiment with the boy, and that they’d better inform him before looking into it, also that he was to carry it with him wherever he went today, and that it’s to go with him to the science exhibit later that afternoon.

“Make sure you keep it in your backpack. If what your father thinks is true, that’ll keep him from breathing fire on us all over the place before we can get him out of the school.”

“I will.”

Mike took the note and was about to leave.

“Wait.”

“What?”

“Let me give you another one for your first period. You’ll be late.”

“Thanks. What about your first period?”

“Those kids? They are too busy texting in there to notice that I haven’t made it in yet.”

Mike took the other note and took off for English.

Destin laughed with delight at his second-period class. The frogs lay on the table, forgotten while they played with the fire-breathing rabbit.

“Look here,” said Destin. He raised up a ball of paper, that he’d taken from one of the student’s notebooks and he held it up for the rabbit.

The rabbit trained its eye on the paper. Destin tossed it into the air, and at that moment, the rabbit spat a stream of fire that torched it. It disintegrated into a mass of light and flame that did not touch the ground.

For the first time in his career, Destin had the full attention of every student in his class.

“Mr. Kelly what is that!” they said.

“What indeed,” he said, as he came around the table to the other side.

“Quite an interesting specimen,” said Destin. “It’s a rabbit, but not. It looks like one, but it’s not. It has the ability to turn red.”

The rabbit flared its fur red, then back to white.

“It has the ability to stay rock-solid in the face of danger, or in front of us for that matter.”

The rabbit just stood there. It kept its eyes on Destin, but otherwise, it stood still.

“We ought to be chasing this rabbit all around the room, instead, it’s calm.”

Someone raised a hand.

“Yes?”

“Then why aren’t we?”

“I don’t know, but I imagine it has to be because it’s a lot surer of itself than we are right now.”

“Maybe it’s scared?”

“Does it look scared?”

Destin picked up the rabbit by the scruff of its neck and held it aloft. The rabbit just looked at him. No turning red, no breathing fire, just a white rabbit, maybe looking a little annoyed. He put the rabbit down, and it stood at the edge of his desk but did not jump off.

“It’s watching us,” said one of the kids.

“Interesting note, you just heard my call, so you know that my son Mike, a middle schooler also found one this morning. I suspect there may be others.”

“What do they want?” said one of the kids.

“Also a good question. I don’t know that either, but I can only suspect.”

“Suspect what?”

“I want to see what happens when I get two or more of them together. Anybody else?”

Everyone’s hand went up.

“Are you all going with me to the science exhibit this afternoon?”

All their hands went up again.

“Good. In that case, all I ask from you is that you don’t tell anyone else about him. No one says I have this rabbit in here, right?” They all agreed.

“No texts, no images posted to your favorite online sites, a blackout right? I’m not supposed to have him, so the fewer people know, the easier it will be for me to get him out of the school, right?”

Everyone just stared.

“Right?”

“Right!” they all said together.

“All right then.”

The bell rang, and everyone filed out. Destin prepared for his next group of kids. Fresh frogs went out to each station. If he had to, he would burn the frog and note that everyone had finished the assignment just fine. He needed to get out of the school with the rabbit intact.

He tucked the rabbit back into the box. It was still tranquil and compliant with everything he wanted to do. He waited for the next class to file in, and let them discover the rabbit again.

Similar results. Before the hour was over, he had another class of students swearing to help him get the rabbit out of the school to safety.

There were the regular guards near the front door, and the off-duty cop wandering the halls. That was all normal, but when you are heading out on a field trip people get a little antsy. The lives of the students are involved, but this was different. This time, Destin had contraband. How do you explain something like this? He tucked the fire-breathing rabbit under his arm, in its cardboard box. He chuckled at that. Cardboard. He did a facepalm and just shook it off with a smile, and had his kids line up. Not everyone was going to the science exhibit, but most of them were. He had two more classes from that afternoon that would be going as well, and they hadn’t seen the rabbit yet. Once he had all the students from his earlier classes lined up, and the rest of them sent off to other classes for the afternoon, he shut the door. It was quite a full house as he pulled out the rabbit to show the rest of them.

Everyone was now in on the big secret.

The rabbit, under careful petting of its soft white fur, turned deep red, with darker red patches again, the eyes lit up, and then fire! It erupted from the rabbit’s mouth like a sneeze went wrong. All they could do was applaud.

Back in the box, the rabbit calmed back down and turned white again, and they were out the door. The kids lined up, but there was no chance they were going to get left behind, every eye was on Mr. Kelly and the box. They turned the corners and came to the front of the school, and it was more like a dance.

Destin walked up to the officer, as they were about to check out of the school, and turned before getting to him. He swapped the box for a stack of papers from one of his students. It was a sign-up sheet for the field trip. He went over it with the officer, noting names, yes I have him, no, he’s sick today, yes I have him while another boy carried the box and the rabbit through the doors and onto the bus. The rabbit made its way back and forth through the kids until everyone was on board. Destin was the last to climb on.

“Where is he, kids?”

They pointed to a chair three rows back, where the rest of the boxed up experiments were piled up.

“There you are.”

Destin opened the box, and the rabbit’s ears popped out.

“Hello there.”

It jumped from the box, flat-footed, and landed on Destin’s shoulder.

“What’s that?” said the bus driver, who was getting the bus in gear.

“Just our mascot,” said Destin. “He’s part of one of the experiments.”

“I don’t think you’re supposed to have animals.”

“I’m a rule breaker. That’s true. Thought the kids would like to see something that was alive rather than another preserved frog.”

“Long as you know what you’re doing.”

The rabbit was alert, focused and laser-like as the bus pulled out, looking in all directions.

About halfway there, he turned bright red and became excited, jumping from kid to kid. Across the street, almost riding next to them, was a pack of four or five other rabbits, who sensing the other’s presence in the box, also turned red and started to leap in ten-foot bounds, keeping right up with them.

A white rabbit perches eerily on a playground seesaw as its fur turns deep red and its eyes glow with fire. A young girl watches in awe while other children remain unaware of the transformation.

Attack of the Atomic Bunny Rabbits, Chapter 3

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!

It had been a while since Maria had been able to get out of the house on her own. Open roads, clear skies, all her people off at various schools. Annie’s child seat was empty.

She rolled down the window and let in what remained of the cool morning air. The radio was buzzing. Pop songs and news bites, and weather every few minutes. Something involving rabbits flitted by one station. No matter where she turned there seemed to be some kind of story involving rabbits.

“I don’t see what the bother is. You can see rabbits in the yard sometimes in the spring.”

She pulled off the road and lined up in the drive-through for the Dino Coffee. She could already smell it in the air. Across the street was a car wash that was usually busy, but today there was only a fire truck and an ambulance there. The lights were on.

“I wonder what happened over there?”

She pulled up a car length and smelled the coffee laden air. It filled her nostrils with the scent of cinnamon, and vanilla, and burning ash. She opened her eyes. Across the street, she could tell that the car wash was on fire. There was now a break in the roof, and smoke was streaming out of the building. Shortly another fire truck arrived.

Standing on its own by the street at the intersection was a single white rabbit.

She turned to look at the Dino Coffee menu, and when she looked back, it was gone.

“How can we help you?” said the voice over the speaker.

“I’m looking for a large mocha stegosaur with cream today,” said Maria.

“I’ll find you one, kill it and have it ready for you at the window, anything else I can get for you?”

“That’ll do it.”

“Thanks very much. See you there.”

Maria drove up to the window. Where did that rabbit go?

“I said that’ll be nine-fifty-three,” said Melissa, who was hanging out the window with her coffee. She was wearing a brown and green apron, a black shirt and a baseball hat with a foam rubber Tyrannosaurus Rex above the bill.

“I’m sorry, here you go, thanks, Melissa.”

“No problem, Mrs. Kelly.”

She took the drink. “Thank you much.”

She pulled away and almost ran over another rabbit who was crossing in front of her, streaking along like a dog.

“What is going on here?”

She pulled around the corner, to get out of the lot and saw three more escaping into the woods by the side of the road.

She sipped her coffee and carried on. Rabbits.

Annie was alone on the playground.

One of the swings was swinging in the breeze. There was a creek in the metal, and she could hear the old playground equipment grinding in the wind. There were other kids around, but no one was there with her. She sat, on a metal duck, with paint that was peeling off its left side, creeping back and forth when she saw the rabbit. It was standing on the edge of the seesaw, up high, with no one on the other side.

Shouldn’t the rabbit push it down?

It sat up there, hovering, and looking all around. No one else noticed it. They were all heading inside. Teachers were calling, but Annie didn’t hear them. Instead, she walked out to the rabbit, in slow steps.

It twitched, and she stopped like a statue.

In a moment, it hunkered down and she resumed, one slow step at a time. She was right upon it. It stood there, rubbing its little eyes and ears, then it looked up at her.

“Hi,” she said. “Can I pet you?”

“Annie,” called a teacher’s assistant. “Come on in, what is that, a rabbit?”

The rabbit looked up and sniffed the air. Its nose twitched like lightning. It looked around, saw the teacher’s assistant, and stood up on its hind feet.

Its eyes blazed, then its fur stood up and turned red with dark patches in a flash.

“Woah,” said Annie.

“Annie, come on back from that rabbit,” said the assistant.

Annie didn’t move.

“Annie, come on dear.”

Annie reached out. The rabbit’s fur was deep red, but it looked soft. She touched it and found that it was soft, warm and luxurious, silky. The rabbit turned and showed Annie its back. She scratched it between the ears.

“Annie!”

Annie turned, hearing the teacher.

The rabbit turned as well. Its eyes lit up like fire, and it screeched as its fur erupted in flame.

Annie fell to the ground and began to run for the teacher.

The rabbit jumped to the ground and ran through the playground, looking for a way out. It found a crack in the fence big enough to get through, and bolted for it, leaving a trail of fire in its wake. It pumped through the crack and shook like a dog trying to shake off the water, but instead shook off the flames that were hugging its body. It darted between trees, and into a line of bushes before the red color faded back to white. A few moments later it was calm, and looking for a nice cool place to hang out for a while.

“Are you all right?” said the teacher’s assistant as she pulled Annie up from the ground.

“It wasn’t going to hurt me!”

“Come on inside.”

“I said I was fine! It wasn’t going to hurt me!”

“I know, come on. Let’s get inside.”

They went in, and Annie sat down to play house with some of the other girls. One boy was there, more interested in hanging out with the girls than the guys.

She watched out the window, looking for it, but could only see the trail of burned grass it had left while it was running away.

While she was persuading the boy to do the dishes in the little kitchen, her father was opening the box in his science classroom.

“Let’s find out what’s in here,” said Destin.

He pulled up the flaps and found a round nest of shredded paper inside. He pulled it apart to find the rabbit down there hiding.

“Come on out. I won’t hurt you.”

He reached in and allowed the rabbit to sniff him a little. Then he curled his hand up under the rabbit’s belly and pulled him from the box. He made sure to support the rabbit’s body.

The rabbit allowed itself to be held, and after a moment seemed okay with it.

“Are you one of those rabbits we heard about on the news little guy?”

The kids were still banging at the door.

“Who’d have thought kids would want to get in here so badly today eh?” he said to the rabbit. He stepped over to the door and opened it.  “Come in, come in already,” he said to the kids.

“Mr. Kelly, you have a rabbit!” said one of them as they entered the room.

Destin looked down, jumped like he hadn’t realized he was holding anything at all and smiled at the kids. “So it appears I do. Now that is interesting, isn’t it?”

He tucked the rabbit, who seemed content to be held like this, under his arm and continued to teach that way.

The kids sat at large black tables, with two students to a table. On each Destin placed a preserved frog for dissection for each pair of kids. Most of the kids sat with their hands on the table for the first few minutes. Then they began to shake their fears and start to do the business at hand. Some did well. Others botched their frogs from stem to stern, but most were average, getting the job done, but not to perfection. One slipped and cut his frog’s legs completely off.

Destin didn’t tell them that the exercise was more of a test of nerves to see if the kids would do the project at all. As the hour was winding down, one of them, long finished with his frog went ahead and said it.

“So, what’s with the rabbit Mr. Kelly?”

“That, my young sir, is a good question.”

The rabbit jumped up to sit on the corner of its box, turned red, and then belched fire like a small dragon into the room.

Arriving at his own school, Mike ran to get away from one of the teachers. He already had a rabbit in his backpack and was ducking for cover to avoid his science teacher, who he knew he’d see later in the day. He ducked into the bathroom, passed the stalls to the last one, got in and bolted himself in.

He unzipped the pack, and there it stood. What was amazing to Mike was just how calm and still, it was, even after traveling around in his backpack like that.

“Hey, little buddy. You’re all right.”

He stroked its fur, which was soft and fluffy for such an ordinary white rabbit. He ran his fingers through the fur. It was unlike anything he’d ever felt before. The fluffiest cat or a recently bathed and dried dog couldn’t compare, and then the red fur. It flashed from white to red, with darker patches that could be black, or maybe a dark crimson.

“Is this when you blow it?”

The rabbit sat still and then nuzzled Mike for some more scratches.

“Why do you turn red like that?”

Its eyes blazed.

Mike’s science teacher, Mr. Phillips, came into the bathroom.

“Mike, are you in here? We’re not just talking detention here you know. I just want to see the rabbit.”

Mike said nothing.

He stood frozen on the spot.

The rabbit’s ears perked up and zoned in on the sound of the approaching teacher.

“I know you’re in here. You may as well come out.”

The rabbit turned, now fixated on the approaching person.

Mike watched it seem to blink off all observation of anything else.

“What are you doing?” asked Mike.

“Mike, is that you?” said Mr. Phillips.

“Don’t come any closer,” said Mike. “I don’t think it’s ready yet.”

“It’s just a rabbit Mike, what harm could there be?”

The rabbit’s fur went from soft and deep red to blazing with a fiery light.

“I think you better hang back Mr. Phillips.”

Mr. Phillips reached Mike’s stall.

“Come on Mike, open up. I just want to see the bunny, right?”

“Okay, well you asked for it.”

Mike opened up the stall, releasing the little metal knob, and Mr. Phillips pulled the door open to see them.

The rabbit was blazing with fire. Smoke was starting to go everywhere. Its deep red fur glistened with fiery light, and its eyes blazed with white-hot fire.

“What the…” said Mr. Phillips as the rabbit spat forth a stream of dragon fire from its mouth.

Mr. Phillips hit the floor, and the shower of flame washed over him and melted the mirrors over the line of sinks.