Easter Is Supposed to Be Harmless
Soft. Sweet. Safe.
Most people spend Easter hunting for chocolate eggs.
Pastel colours.
Family lunches.
The comforting idea that this is one of the gentler celebrations on the calendar.
Nothing sharp.
Nothing dangerous.
Nothing that bites back.
It’s a nice illusion.
Nature Doesn’t Care About Your Illusions
Step outside the curated version of Easter, and things look very different.
Nature isn’t soft.
It isn’t kind.
And it definitely isn’t safe.
Everything hunts.
Everything runs.
Everything fights to survive.
Predators don’t ask permission.
And prey doesn’t get a second chance.
In Killer Little Bunny, Marin steps into that world with a simple objective.
Her target is Hugh Atwater.
A man who calls himself a great white hunter.
A man with too much money, a taste for endangered species, and the kind of entitlement that assumes the world exists for his amusement.
When the Hunter Becomes the Target
Atwater sees himself as the apex predator.
The kind of man who takes what he wants, kills what he wants, and never expects consequences.
Men like that usually don’t.
Marin’s job is to change that.
End him.
Make it messy.
And make sure the blame lands anywhere but where it belongs.
Simple.
Except this time, Marin isn’t the only predator in play.
Because the wild doesn’t belong to men like Atwater.
And neither do the people who live in it.
Out here, everything he thought he controlled is turning against him.
Easter Was Never This Innocent
Easter likes to pretend the world is soft.
That danger can be wrapped in pastel colours and hidden behind chocolate and tradition.
Killer Little Bunny doesn’t buy into that.
Because predators don’t disappear just because the calendar says they should.
They adapt.
They hide.
They keep hunting.
And sometimes, the only way to stop them…is to become something worse.
If you like your thrillers fast, sharp, and just a little feral… if you prefer your justice brutal and your villains very, very mortal…
This one’s for you.
Killer Little Bunny is out now!
Because in the wild, there’s no such thing as harmless.
Only predators.
And prey… that learned to fight back.
