She brought the hammer down.
She placed it on the anvil of her secret workbench—a flat stone under the weeping willow. She raised a hammer. Her paw shook. The geode gleamed up at her, innocent and invincible. She thought of all the things she’d crushed: the eggs of the thrush (empty, she told herself), the jawbone of a shrew (already dead), the little glass bead from the badger’s bracelet (he never missed it). Each one had been a door to a dark, sweet room. And now the geode was the grandest door of all. Hard Crush Fetish Beatrice Rabbit
She knew it was wrong. Rabbits were soft. Rabbits were nibblers and nesters, not destroyers. But the shame only sharpened the pleasure. She brought the hammer down
One evening, she found the perfect thing. A geode, no bigger than her paw, studded with quartz crystals. She held it to the lamplight. It was beautiful—cold, flawless, defiant. She turned it over and over, trembling. “This time,” she whispered, “I’ll stop after this.” Her paw shook