Lionel set the box down with a soft thud. He looked around the room, at the empty table he'd setup for today's project. Panting a bit from carrying the heavy box, the little fox envisioned the soft rolling hills, the loosely organized houses, the so-called downtown consisting of a dozen or so two or three story buildings, the park with its swing sets and sandboxes, and the big store with its large parking lot (that would save him a lot of landscape sculpting) across the river (which would cost him slightly more of it) and of course, the train connecting it all. He opened the box up and got to work. Some time later, Lionel stood beside the table, his handpaws resting near some trees, and admired his handiwork. The sun was now low enough in the sky to shine directly in through the window behind him, casting the whole town in a warm afternoon glow with long shadows - including the one he was casting over the playground, which seemed to be shifting. Lionel frowned, staring at his own shadow more than the buildings it hung over. Why was he suddenly sprouting two...antennae? Ears? Wait, now he was getting bigger? He didn't feel any dif- *POMF* "Ooooh, whatcha got, Lionel?" Lionel grimaced, his head pushed nearly to treetop level by the massive weight - two weights, really - that had suddenly landed on his shoulders. His handpaws deformed the foam under them, but had he not already been braced like that, the swing set in front of him would probably be in his mouth. "H-hi, Chrome..." he grunted, blushing as he realizing her chest was even heavier than the box that had held all of the work now in front of him. The train whirred by at a casual pace, drawing the busty rabbit's attention. "Wow~, you got it all working already too?" Her arms wrapped around him as she leaned on him even harder. "That's so neato~! Good job!" Lionel's handpaws were now making craters in the edge of the landscape, and the top bar of the swing set now creaked under his closed jaw. "Hhhnks, Kroh..." Finally, she relented. Both of them stood upright, allowing Lionel a moment of respite as his mind shifted from needing to protect his handiwork to just how close and in contact he had just been with the dangerous kaiju behind him. She shifted to his side, no longer overtaking his shadow, but casting an even larger one as she pressed her belly against the edge of the table. Casually, she ripped a tree out of the ground and held it up to her face, examining it. "It looks so real! Whatcha gonna do with all this stuff?" Lionel choked. "D-don't...do that...please." It was difficult to make demands as he looked up at her, but she seemed to understand. "Oops~! Sorry~" She pushed the tree back into the terrain more or less where it had previously been, burying its entire trunk in the ground and bending the rest in the process. Lionel wondered whether the tiny plastic people around would protest the old tree being replaced by a new bush, but they were quickly censored by a massive bunny handpaw as Chrome mashed them all into the landscape to admire what a great job she had done fixing the tree. "There we go!" Lionel started to speak up about it, but, worried that it might ultimately do more harm than good, decided to let the people go unheard. He winced when he saw the hand-shaped crater she left as she pulled back, the people pushed completely into the foam of the terrain. The train whirred by again. "Hey, what kinda train is that?" She leaned over to get a closer look. Lionel watched in horror, unable to stop the event as it seemed to play out in slow motion. Her ample chest, propelled as much by her motion as by gravity, didn't simply settle onto the cul-de-sac of houses near the train tracks - no, it carried that momentum with it as the first two houses to feel the impact resisted for a fraction of a second before completely shattering under the force of her chest. Their resistance muffled the initial thuds of her breasts landing, and deformed them just slightly before the houses gave out, enhancing the secondary and tertiary thumps as Chrome fully leaned over. The neighboring houses, which were already being pushed out of the way and cracking as the first two houses were sacrificed to buy them time, succumbed to the bunny's bountiful chest. They bent and broke, mostly buried underneath her shirt, but with some bits awkwardly sticking out from all around her chest. Five or six houses in all were now completely destroyed, with one or two luckier ones being simply pushed out of the way, their build quality being stronger than the glue that held them to the now-ripped terrain. Chrome, seemingly oblivious to all of this, watched the train go by. She reached out to touch it, only stopping when she heard her fuzzy friend call out. "Chrooome! Be careful! Y-you're breaking it!" She blinked, the train escaping from under her hand, mere inches from certain disaster. She looked down, and scooted back to have a look, dragging her chest along the landscape and squeaking when she heard the surviving house that had been spared by the gap between her chest and her belly collapse and break as it was steamrolled by her chest, along with a couple of trees and miscellaneous scenery. She stood up, and Lionel watched as bits of his project fell from her chest. Broken chunks of house, some of the tiny plastic people, a broken car or two, some shattered trees, and various other debris all rained down on the terrain between the two massive craters and the edge of the table where she stood. She giggled nervously. "Eheheh...sooorrryyy Lionel~!" The fox found it hard to stay mad at her saccharine face as she rubbed the back of her neck. Seeing all of the tiny stuff cascading off of her body was a distraction in its own right - more so when she began to brush the remaining green tree fuzz and tiny people off of herself, her chest jiggling somewhat under the repeated strokes of her arms. It was such a sight that he scarcely noticed the people and debris tumbling onto the landscape near him, or off the table completely. Chrome looked over the damaged area. The landscape that had been under her belly had largely been spared, though it was now rich with debris from the area that had most certainly not. A single house from the cul-de-sac was still intact, albeit at an awkward angle and a few inches from the bare terrain where it had been glued. She picked it up. "Hey, at least this one's okay! Right?" She turned her whole body to face him, presenting the house to him like a prize. A tiny plastic person, forgotten on the ground, was completely snuffed out under her sizeable bunny footpaw as she repositioned herself - her hip thudding against the table and shaking the entire setup. A water tower on the far side of the display teetered from the distant impact, then toppled over. "Oh! I'm sorry, I'll fix it!" She could easily have walked around the table to the far side, but Chrome was so intent to make things up to her fuzzy pal, she decided to waste no time. The fastest way was a straight line. She set the house aside and pressed her hands into the landscape, completely crushing the park's new bush as well as several of the cars in the big box store's parking lot, but this was nothing compared to the deforestation at the edge of the display caused by her knee as she hoisted one leg up onto the table. "Chrome, no! Wait! Don't do that!" "Huh?" Halfway onto the table already, her weight shifted as she again turned to face him - her torso sliding over her leg and onto the other side. With a hefty thud, the bunny's curvy thigh and hip crashed into the big store's parking lot, smashing and compacting a dozen or so of the little miniature cars and driving their broken remains into the terrain. Her tail, mostly hanging off the edge of the display, brushed over some of the trees and debris behind her, knocking them to the ground. Chrome braced herself in this somewhat awkwardly-seated position by pushing her hand into the river that separated the big store from the rest of the layout, narrowly missing the bridge between the two, but turning a small tugboat in the river into a new plastic reef. The bunny now sat on one leg, bent across the edge of the display, the other leg dangling off of the table. The parking lot had all but disappeared underneath her and the edge of the big store's roof pushed against the back of her shorts. "Don't you want me to fix it?" Lionel was speechless. It was entirely due to the sight before him, but for multiple reasons he didn't bother trying to process. Blushing, his eyes darting from her apologetic face to her destructive curves and back, he eked out a response. "N-no, it's fine! R-really! I'll take care of it. Just..." He choked again. Some part of him almost *wanted* her to continue. The project had taken him most of the day, but on some level, he knew it was doomed, if not to his friend Rem's teasing, then to whatever impossible cosmic horror scenario would unfold this week. Maybe this was the best way. "Just...d-don't..." He gulped, half-worried, half-wanting this brief interruption to change the context of what he said next. "...break more of it, please." Chrome leaned over to pick up the house again. Rather than return to her previous awkward seated position, she opted to adjust herself, sitting up properly - and, it seemed, a couple of inches higher than she had just been, if only for a brief moment. The big box store creaked under the much bigger bunny. It likely would not have held up to her chest, much less her entire weight. Her tail overhung the back of the store, knocking over some of the trees that dotted the landscape between the back of the store and the river. The store began to give way almost as immediately as it had accepted her weight, the subtle horizontal momentum of her taking a seat forcing its squared columns into awkward angles, and rendering their structural rigidity useless. Before Chrome realized what was happening, the entire store's roof shifted out of alignment with its base, the walls caving completely, the internal aisles and rows of products and plastic people standing no chance as the enormous bunny's rear brought everything down at once with a fantastic crackling crash that shook the entire table. Chrome and Lionel froze for what felt like a full minute. "S-sorry again, Lionel~...I can fix that too." She looked down at the debris that had exploded out on all sides of her. "...Probably." Lionel rubbed his forehead, partly in disbelief, partly to hide his blushing face. Her admirable curves were completely wrecking his display, and even though this sort of thing was practically normal for him anymore, it never stopped being strangely intriguing to him. Chrome, meanwhile, looked across the display. She now had three goals: Replace the house, upright the water tower, and fix the store. For a moment, she considered crawling across the display, but managed to realize that moving on her hands and knees would plow through more of the miniatures and cause more trouble. But if she stood up, she could be more precise, stepping only in the empty areas and navigating safely. Feeling pleased with her flawless logic, Chrome rotated onto her knees, pulling both legs onto the display now. The motion sent the roof of the store careening off the side of the table, along with some of the people and products inside it. Now on her hands and knees, she took the opportunity to brush some of the debris off of the back of her shorts. This was made somewhat awkward as she had to consider the house held in one hand, but it remained mostly undamaged as it scraped lightly against her rear and thigh. A quick wiggle of her tail dismissed whatever -and whoever - was left. The sight of this entire process was not lost on Lionel, who nearly covered his own eyes from what was surely something he shouldn't see. He tried to convince himself to focus on the ground, where the people and debris were now scattered, but his eyes were once again drawn to Chrome as she stood up. His reason for watching her once again shifted, now to fear - panic almost - at what she planned to do next. "W-what are you doing?" His voice was slightly shaky. "Just leave it to me!" She swung her whole body around to face him, making a silly exaggerated salute with the house in her hand - her now widened stance sending her paw nearest Lionel straight into the bridge that linked that corner of the display to the rest of it. The small two-lane arch bridge was completely crushed into the acrylic fake water, her toes dwarfing the little plastic cars on the road before flattening them into the road deck, which immediately gave way and collapsed onto the supports, which themselves toppled over and shattered as her paw filled the space. The river was narrow enough that her paw formed a bridge in its own right, her toes somewhat awkwardly compressed by the riverbanks. The bridge had completely disappeared under the ball of her footpaw, and it crackled against the artificial water as she shifted her weight to pull her paw away from it. Lionel flattened his ears, looking up at her with a look that had "Really?" written all over it. Chrome planted her paw on top of a tree on the riverbank, knocking it down and using it to scrape the bridge debris and car bits off. Looking at Lionel, she retained her saluting pose, albeit now with her tongue stuck out in response to his glare. Adding "build a new bridge" to her list of goals, she turned around and took the first step, crossing the river and stepping down in the already-destroyed area of the cul-de-sac from earlier. Bringing her other paw up closer, she felt a little plastic bus explode between the backs of her toes and the ball of her footpaw. She pretended not to notice, hoping Lionel wouldn't either. Chrome crouched down, her tail knocking over anything behind her that hadn't already been toppled when she had originally leaned over the area in which she now stood, and delicately set the house down where it had originally been, patting it on the roof as if to reassure it. One goal down. She stood up again, and looked to the water tower. It was on the corner of the table opposite from the crater that was once the big box store. The little train whirred by below, but she'd have to explore that later. Lionel watched nervously, wincing with every step the bunny took. Chrome tried to find empty patches to place her feetpaws, but it seemed like a tree or a car had to be sacrificed with each step in order to reach the water tower. She left behind broken miniatures and massive pawprints that would surely puzzle the tiny plastic people for centuries to come. Particularly precarious was the stride she took directly over the small downtown-seque district. It was a simple square of roads with a dozen or so buildings only a few stories tall, but for a town of this size, it qualified in Lionel's mind as "the city part". Besides, proper tall buildings wouldn't have fit in the box. But the short stature of the buildings - hardly reaching her ankles - allowed her to step harmlessly over it, leading Lionel to sigh with relief and just a tiny tinge of disappointment. Chrome now stood over the toppled water tower, a tree crackling under one paw, a couple of tiny people mashed into the terrain under the other. She bent over and stood it up right. Smiling, she stood up and turned back to Lionel. "See? I told you I'd fix it!" Lionel looked from her satisfied face, down across the trail of paw-sized craters between her and the bridge near the opposite corner of the layout. "Y-yeah." He gulped slightly. "You uh, you sure did..." Chrome examined his face from afar. "What's wrong...?" "Huh? N-nothin'!" Chrome looked at him suspiciously. There was silence, aside from the model train whirring around the rails below. After a moment, she grinned. "Waiiit a second, I know what's up~!" Lionel squeaked, his ears perking up. "Huh?" "Youuuu /want/ me to smash it! Don'tcha!" She raised a paw and curled her toes around the top of the water tower. Lionel's tail twitched. "What? N-no! Don't break it! I...just..." Chrome cut him off. "Aww, okay~..." Lionel blinked. "Aww? You...want to break it?" Chrome started walking back, careful to step in her own pawprints, albeit facing the other way. "Welllll~, it is kinda fun. You should try it!" "Wha-no! Why would I do that?" Chrome looked at him, puzzled. "What part of 'fun' don'tcha get, silly?" To prove her point, she deliberately took her next step right onto one of the multi-story downtown buildings. It instantly gave way, its plastic sides bursting outwards and snapping into pieces, scattering internal details across the area. Her toes caught the roof of the neighboring slightly-shorter building on the way down, blowing out its sides and folding its roof over. The second building was ripped from its glued foundation and its bottom corner kicked out, tearing a third building from the terrain and knocking it over harmlessly onto some traffic and plastic citizens. "See?" Lionel stared, jaw slightly open, for he was powerless to do anything else. Chrome eventually realized what she had done. "O-oh! Oh, oops, hehe, I'm sorry! I can fix that one, too..." She moved to the side, crushing a small bus and smearing its plastic bits across the road, her other foot coming down on the shortest building in the square, a single-story shop. It resisted for the slightest moment, before completely disappearing into a shattered mess under her paw. Chrome bent over and started trying to unfold the building her toes had deformed mere moments ago. The fragile plastic instead snapped into smaller chunks between her fingers, rendering her efforts futile. Lionel, blushing and trying not to stare at all of this, lowered his ears and looked aside. "Uhm...you uh, y-you..." Chrome stopped, looking over at him. "Hmm?" Lionel gulped. "You m-might as well, uh..." He looked around, as if to make sure no one was spying on him. "You might as well...finish it off...." His face got a little redder. "The whole thing, I mean." He paused. "It's uh, too late f-for this one..." His eyes darted about all of the damage done, before settling on the destruction under per paws. Chrome frowned. "Huh~? Are you sure? All of it?" She looked around at what was left. It wasn't much, but it seemed like it might still be salvageable. Lionel swallowed, hesitated, his eyes flicking for just a moment to the little train going by in front of him, and nodded, his tail wriggling slightly. Chrome stood up, the bent building still in her hands. "Well~..." She crushed the little building between her hands, squeezing its walls in with her fingers and twisting the whole structure, sending a shower of plastic bits all over the ground. "Okies!" With that, she grinned and stepped onto the side of the building that had earlier been knocked over. Leaning on it slightly was all it took to completely demolish the little model, along with all of the survivors underneath it. She twisted her paw, grinding all of that into the ground, before prancing around the squared center of town in a small circle, each footfall causing an explosion of plastic and foam, scattering tiny people and cars all over. Chrome smashed the last building underpaw and then stood proudly over it. She looked at Lionel. "Like that?" Lionel's face was quite red, his eyes locked on her, darting about across her form and to her paws and back. He nodded rapidly. "Heeee~" Chrome faced away from him, twisting several sets of debris underpaw in the process, before trundling across the small forested hills - now completely ignoring whatever she stepped on - and made her way back to the water tower. She raised a paw over it, setting her heel atop the tower, and half-stomped down, skewering the terrain with the water tower's legs, which hit the table underneath and immediately collapsed, giving way for the body of the water tower to hit the ground, where it crunched loudly under the bunny's paw. "Oooops~!" She giggled, kicking some trees off the table as she turned back around. A familiar noise caught her ear. Out from a tunnel in a small hill she had just happened not to step directly on came the little train that had been making its way in loops around the display this entire time. It had somehow managed to avoid being derailed despite everything. Chrome followed it, at first with her eyes, but then with the rest of her, walking on either side of the tracks. She stalked it, keeping pace, pretending to be sneaky even as she padded through the rest of the houses, collapsing one completely under paw, smearing another by stepping on it while swinging her paw forwards, grinding yet a third underpaw as she twisted to follow the train around its curve. As the train ran parallel to a road directly in front of Lionel, she shifted to walking with both feetpaws on that road. She walked, nearly heel-to-toe, as the train was not very fast, each footfall crushing a couple of cars, or a bus, or at one point a semi with its trailer which carried a dozen tiny plastic logs - all of which snapped in rapid succession under her paw. Chrome giggled, seeing an opportunity. The train curved again, following the river and diverting away from the remains of the bridge from earlier. She trampled through what was left of the trees and traffic in that area, dozens of tiny plastic people and other debris stuck to her paws by now. Now on the last pristine corner of the whole display, the train began to cross a small bridge over a pond that hung off of one side of the river. The bridge had a single support in the middle and a series of trusses across the top. First the locomotive crossed, then one of the passenger cars, and then, as the second passenger car was centered on the bridge, the bunny made her move. Chrome stomped, with some force, directly onto the bridge as the train was crossing it. The trusses snapped off without resistance, the train was instantly halted - at least horizontally - but was pushed down into the bridge itself. The bridge's connections on either side gave way under the rampaging rabbit, and the central support burst up through the bottom of the bridge and skewered the passenger car as the rest of the bridge fell away into the fake water below. The remaining cars behind the train fell off the rails from the impact, tumbling over. The locomotive and first passenger car miraculously remained on the rails, the locomotive's wheels spinning helplessly against the metal beneath them. "Wow...." Lionel involuntarily exhaled, his eyes locked on the show of power before him. Chrome giggled, glancing back at him. She picked up the three train cars that were behind the one still skewered on the bridge and watched his reaction as she stretched them out in front of her face, straining the curiously strong connectors between the cars. Chomp! Chrome bit down on the center train car, crushing it between her teeth. Opening her jaw, she manipulated it with her tongue, pulling it deeper into her mouth from the middle, folding it in half and snapping the connectors before chomping down again. Tiny plastic people tumbled out, some of them whole, some of them in bits. "Rawr~!" she giggled again, messily eating the train car and swallowing its passengers. Lionel would've been a lot more concerned if he wasn't so distracted by the spectacle of it. She would probably be fine from that. Chrome took one of the cars between both hands, looked it over, and then squeezed it on either end, pressing her thumbs into one side of it. The car crackled and then snapped as she broke it in half, scattering a few tiny people from inside like an improperly opened bag of candy. These, too, she ate, chewing up one half and then the other, even more people and debris tumbling all over her chest, most falling all the way to the ground. She gripped the third car by the sides and dug her fingertip into one end. With an all-too-easy motion, she tore the entire roof off, snapping it into two or three parts as its supports gave way unevenly. The bunny peered into the car, licking her lips. She tilted her head back and half-poured, half-dropped the train car haphazardly into her mouth, biting into it and chewing pieces off, swallowing some of the people inside whole and others in bits along with pieces of the train. "Mmmm~!" she giggled, looking down at Lionel again, who was well beyond being able to form sentences at this point. Looking back down at the remains, she could still hear the locomotive grinding against the rails, held in place to the skewered train car via the intact train car in the middle. She made short work of the intact car, stomping it flat with one motion, its bits exploding everywhere. In that same motion, she caught the locomotive under two of her toes, holding it in place. She leaned on that same footpaw, forcing the wheels to stop grinding, but causing the motor to vibrate and heat up. Her other footpaw now free, she decided that the impaled train car had served its purpose, and disposed of it by pressing her free paw into the side of the bridge support pillar and snapping it at the base, before grinding what was left of that train car - along with the chunks of bridge - into the acrylic fake water, damaging that, too. The little locomotive was becoming quite warm from the load that was well beyond what it was meant to handle, and smoke started to billow out from inside it. Chrome giggled. "I didn't know this was a steam train!" She pulled the locomotive backwards, a rapid series of loud snapping noises coming from inside it as its drivetrain was completely destroyed, the now unloaded motor suddenly screeching loudly. She lifted her paw, and the now stranded locomotive was unable to escape its fate as she stomped down on it, grinding and twisting her paw into it, breaking the rails themselves and even tearing off a chunk of the terrain in the process. Now free from the noise of the train, Chrome looked out across what was left. Lionel stared at her, then at the destruction, then back at her, then briefly at the playground in front of him, then at the destruction, then back to her again. Chrome caught each of these movements, and giggled slyly. "Ooops~, looks like I missed a spot~!" The bunny trundled through the display, weaving through anything that hadn't been destroyed yet, even smashing the train tunnel directly, before standing directly in front of Lionel with the swing sets and other playground equipment between her paws in front of him. She stepped on one of the swing sets on one side, snapping it effortlessly under a toe and breaking the rest into tiny pieces, and twisted a merry go round on the other side under her paw, compacting it and smashing it into the ground as it soon ceased to be able to spin. Lionel was torn between the close up view and wanting to see all of her, and after some hesitation, took a few steps back, wincing as he stepped on a tiny plastic person with one paw and crushed a car under another. Chrome had only a handful of playground equipment left, directly below her - a slide, another swing set, and some other things, along with a few surviving trees. She looked at Lionel, grinned, and lightly hopped, bending her knees in the air and landing with a layout-shattering CRASH on the remaining miniatures under her rear, shattering and obliterating them. The entire layout bent around the impact, the back corners jumping a full foot off of the table, sending all of the remnants and debris flying all over the room and denting the table itself, the front legs of which now bowed outwards very slightly. "Ehehehehe~!" She giggled as Lionel slowly unfolded his ears after that noise, opening his eyes to see the bunny girl sitting on an absolute model apocalypse. "See! I told you it was fun!"