Fourteen pairs of eyes looked back at Jian as she turned away from the whiteboard. She had just finished writing up a comprehensive list of programming language, covering the basics such as input and output, variables and leading into more complex concepts like higher and lower level programming languages. She was glad to see the focus on most of the faces before her as they looked between her and what she had written, various shapes of ears pivoting to her as she began her explanation. It had been almost a week since the beginning of the course, and the panda woman had taken to teaching more smoothly than she had anticipated. Her students likewise had taken well to her lessons, her method of explaining complex topics in simple terms to begin with one that was able to reach even those with less experience than the others. There was of course, tension. Half of her class were felids of one sort or another, but there were also three lapids, a squirrel, two weasels and a fox present. Though they were more or less respectful to one another, one of the rabbits had become the target of what Jian hoped was good natured ribbing from two leopard students. When Jian had reminded them all of the university's rules against eating fellow students and staff, he had simply replied that the girl was perfectly safe. Until the semester was over. Jian had chosen to keep teaching at that point rather than drag the issue further, but the boys had at least seen fit to stay focused after that. That had been two days ago, and though they'd all been better behaved since, the intrusive thought had wormed its way into Jian's mind. The young rabbit, Lily, was the smallest of her students and the most fragile looking. Her pale grey fur and silver hair made her undoubtedly pretty, but the panda knew that attractiveness in preyfolk was a different kind of appeal to the predfolk. She was reminded of Evelyn's cautionary words about puberty and the hunting instinct mixing in young predators, and was not really surprised that Lily had caught their attention. What Jian was not prepared for however was her own thoughts. The idea that Lily would be... easy prey. Although Jian was not subject to the hunting instinct, indeed no panda was, she was still fascinated by the idea. She was still an ursid after all, and other breeds of ursid engaged in hunting. She knew her physiology could handle it, but could her mind? She found herself in her free moments between segments of her lessons and after classes, wondering how it would feel to have the girl in her mouth, sliding down her throat, squirming in her belly... She snapped back to focus, answering the first few questions from her class before building on her initial explanation. Jian was proud of her lesson structure, giving just enough information at the start to prompt curiosity, allowing her students to be proactive in their own learning process. The rest of the day went smoothly enough, she was satisfied with their progress and everyone left the class on good terms. Once back home, Jian found herself once again dwelling on the idea of hunting. It was so surreal to think it was completely normalised here. The idea that a carnivorous citizen could capture a smaller citizen, drag them back home and then devour them alive. Or even just eat them on the spot And it was legal! She supposed the really surprising part was that preyfolk were given citizenship at all. In her home country such a thing had been deemed absurd and impractical, yet the Eastern Sovereignty had successfully integrated even murids into their citizenry. From her favourite armchair, the panda was staring through the living room doorway at her kitchen trash can. At the pieces of watermelon skin sitting visible near the top of its contents. She remembered just two nights prior she had bought the watermelon, carefully removed the skin piece by piece with a knife and her own claws, leaving the round piece of watermelon flesh inside almost completely intact. She remembered how she had swallowed it whole, the piece of sweet fruit roughly as wide as a rabbit or squirrel's torso. It had been easy. A living squirming person that size might be a bit harder to get down, but she was sure she could do it. She took deep breaths. Despite her enthusiasm on the day she had moved here, she had yet to actually try and hunt on any of her free nights. Her confidence wavered as she began to really think about the fact that she'd never hunted before. How would she go about it? She likely couldn't outrun the likes of rabbits or hares, and she'd have trouble spotting squirrels in the dark. She wondered if it might be worth simply taking a walk in the smaller districts and seeing how the other predators managed it. And if she got a chance, well maybe she'd get lucky? The streets were dark and eerily silent this time of night. Though it wasn't quite midnight black yet, the sky was still dark enough by just after 8pm that it would be easy enough for a skilled hunter to remain out of sight. She was wearing a long tracksuit of black she had bought for the exact purpose of remaining hidden and was beginning to wonder at the lack of sightings. Was she really that terrible at stealth? She had wandered the streets of the third district for twenty minutes, only catching the occasional glimpse of movement on her peripheral vision or slight scuffling sound from something or someone too far away to be seen. When it became apparent that she was not going to manage anything here, she headed towards home, back to the seventh district and her own area. As she came close to her street, she finally got a glimpse of someone else. In the dim light, it was difficult to see them at first but she was able to make out the unmistakable fur of a snow leopard on the person's head and limbs as well as the fluffy tail standing out in the dark. Despite her attempts to remain quiet, the snow leopard's ear twitched and they turned her head to look directly at her. Jian saw that it seemed to be an elderly snow leopard woman, similarly dressed in dark attire but not enough to have covered her entirely as Jian had. Her arms were wrapped around herself as she walked, and she was still facing away from Jian as she looked over her shoulder. 'Out for a prowl?' The woman asked, clearly intending the remark as a joke when she saw that she was speaking to a panda. 'It's not very busy tonight.' 'Oh, I uh...' Jian stammered. 'I was actually just curious about... well...' 'Oh?' The woman asked. 'Are you actually hunting? A panda?' 'I... I wanted to try.' Jian admitted. 'But I guess I don't really know what I'm doing.' The snow leopard regarded Jian for a few moments, then a smile creased her lips and she turned and took a few steps closer. As she stepped into the light of a street lamp, it became apparent that her arms were not wrapped around herself, but around two small prisoners. Rabbits, twitching and trying to squirm free from the felid's powerful and secure grasp. Both were breathing rapid, shallow breaths and trembling uncontrollably. As she got a better look at the pair, Jian could see that both were females, and one was noticeably smaller than the other. Jian's mind raced. Seeing the two lapids scared out of their minds and the complete nonchalant attitude of their captor made her realise just how much the instinct divided predators from their prey. The question rose in her mind and she felt compelled to ask. 'A-are you going to eat both of those?' The felid grinned and looked down at her catches. 'Oh, no no. Just one of them. I was planning to choose by the time I got home. But since you're curious, do you want one?' Jian's jaw dropped at the unexpected question, and her eyes looked to the pair of terrified lapids on the verge of tears. It was baffling to her that this was so easy for predators. She had heard that empathy vanished when instinct was active, but this was almost unbelievable. 'U-umm... I don't know, I don't think I was actually expecting to find anyone the first time...' 'Come on home with me.' The woman suggested. 'I can help you figure this out. I can see the moral dilemma all over your face. There's not gonna be much point trying to hunt if you can't move past that little problem first.' Jian nodded slowly, and felt herself falling into step behind the snow leopard. From a size perspective, pandas were typically slightly larger than snow leopards but this woman seemed a bit smaller than average. Despite this, she clearly had her instincts intact and was likely stronger than she looked to have so easily subdued two rabbits so easily. As they walked, Jian realised that this woman actually lived on the same street as her. 'Wow, we live pretty close.' Jian remarked as the pair approached the snow leopard's house. 'My house is just four more up from here.' 'Oh, then welcome to the neighbourhood.' The felid smiled as she grappled both rabbits into the grasp of one arm to open her front door with the other. 'My name is Mira.' 'Uh, Jian.' The panda replied, smiling back. She followed Mira's gesture inside, walking up the hallway before stepping into the living room on her right. The house was a similar layout to her own, but far more furnished. As she heard the door close behind her, Mira stepped past and approached her sofa, forcefully dropping both rabbits onto the central cushion. 'Come on over.' Mira beckoned to Jian. 'Which one do you like? Mother or daughter?' Jian stepped over to the sofa, feeling her heart begin to race. She looked down at the pair of rabbits, trembling on the cushion as the felid and ursid loomed over them. Though she had suspected, hearing Mira confirm that the smaller rabbit was indeed a child had thrown something of a complication into her otherwise strong sense of anticipation. 'Tough choice?' Mira asked. 'I know you pandas don't have the uh, instinct. So if the thought of eating a child doesn't sit well with you, why don't you try the adult?' 'I guess...' Jian began, hesitating as her eyes met those of the rabbit woman clutching her daughter close. What was going to be the last night for one of them had just turned into the last night for both, unless Jian backed out now. Even then, Mira was fully intent on eating one of them so would that really make a difference? 'I-I guess I just never really considered that doing this would mean breaking up families. Wasn't really the first thing I thought of.' 'Never is.' Mira shrugged. 'Not like I planned it this way. But it's not on me that this one is such an irresponsible parent. Seriously, being out with your kid after dark is bad enough, but she might have still made it if she'd been willing to run.' 'You'd expect her to leave her child behind?' Jian asked, her tone betraying her disbelief. Mira sent a wry smile to Jian before she replied. 'Believe me, when it comes to life and death, plenty of parents choose life.' She reached for the pair on the sofa, resulting in the mother squeezing her child close. The girl whimpered as Mira's clawed fingers wrapped around her scruff and pulled her from her mother's grasp. 'P-pleease, noo...' 'Don't do this!' The mother pleaded, trying vainly to pull her child back as the snow leopard dragged her away. Mira began to growl, and Jian could see the instinct beginning to exert its influence more forcefully as the prey tried to resist their fate. The felid's teeth bared and claws dug deeper into the small rabbit's skin. Empathy had truly left the leopard's mind in that moment, replaced only by the drive to consume. Now Jian felt her heart beat even faster as Mira's free hand began to remove the girl's top and pants. She looked ready to remove the underwear as well, but relented after a brief hesitation. The fabric was manufactured not to survive in a predator's stomach, so it seemed Mira had decided to allow the poor rabbit that shred of dignity at least in her last moments. Both rabbits were hysterical now as the girl's exposed pale brown fur elicited a slow, deep breath from her captor. Jian could only watch in morbid and conflicted fascination as Mira brought the small rabbit close to her face. The cat's lips parted and her barbed tongue lapped across the rabbit girl's cheek. The size difference between them was made painfully apparent, as Jian was reminded of her watermelon practice. Even the girl's mother was smaller in width than that had been and Mira was clearly an experienced carnivore. This child was doomed and they all knew it. What might have been a scream caught in the girl's throat as Mira pushed her prey face first into her wide open mouth. Drool glistened briefly in the living room's light as the leopard's jaws closed briefly, only to open slightly as her tongue slipped farther down the rabbit's body, seeming to scoop her by the chest and draw her in deeper. The child's head was halfway vanished into Mira's throat, and disappearing by the second as the felid began to swallow. Jian's heartrate increased yet again and the panda wondered how many times it could increase before she would have health problems. The lapid mother was squeezing her eyes shut and sobbing with small and violent shakes, unable to bear the sights but also unable to block out the horrific wet slurps and the snow leopard's impeded but still audible moans of sheer ecstasy. After a few more moments, only the rabbit's rear and legs were still outside Mira's jaws, and as the felid lifted her head to fix that issue, Jian could see how much she was truly enjoying this meal. The girl was smaller than her mother by about half, but that would still be enough to keep the snow leopard's belly full for at least a day. With a series of rapid gulps and using her hands to force the girl's legs inside, it was a scant few seconds before her feet were gone from sight with one loud, wet swallow. Mira sighed with relief, panting with her mouth still hanging wide open. Jian couldn't help but stare, seeing the shift of the felid's tongue and the arch of her throat rippling with every rapid breath. It wasn't the first time she'd glimpsed inside someone's mouth, but the knowledge that a living person had just moments ago vanished inside was surreal. Jian found herself looking down to Mira's abdomen. As expected, the felid's belly was slightly distended, the small rabbit just enough to make a slight impression on the snow leopard's figure. But even more intriguing than that, the slight but visible movements from within as the woman's prey struggled desperately, vainly, to stay alive. She could only imagine what such a sensation would feel like... But she didn't have to. The other rabbit was right beside her, curled up and weeping as she finally opened her eyes and saw that her child had indeed been eaten alive. Tears dampened the fur of her cheeks and her hands trembled as she looked from felid to ursid, dreading what would come next. 'Your turn, dear.' Mira spoke, reaching for the lapid woman and dragging her to her feet on the couch, still looking very small compared to the predators before her. Mira turned to Jian and raised an eyebrow. 'Are you still wanting to do this? I can help you through your first time, otherwise I'm gonna have to put this one up for the night so she can leave in the morning.' 'You would do that?' Jian asked. 'Of course.' Mira nodded with a smile. 'I have a spare closet I'd lock her inside with a comfortable little bed she can sleep in until morning. There's no reason not to be hospitable at this point, if I toss her back outside another predator could have her in minutes. My instinct needs sating, but I'm not insensitive. It was my original plan to keep the survivor safe. But if you want to take this opportunity, I'm perfectly okay with that too.' 'Please don't...' The rabbit woman spoke up suddenly, her broken voice cracking further as she looked to Jian with pleading eyes. 'Y-you're a panda, not one of these monsters! Please let me go...' 'Monsters...' Mira scoffed. 'Happy to live in the infrastructure felids built, nothing but insults when your own irresponsibility gets your daughter eaten.' 'I... I just...' Whatever the rabbit was going to say was lost as she squeezed her eyes shut and broke into another bout of sobbing. 'What'll it be, Jian?' Mira asked, resting her free hand on her own belly. 'Instinct or not, I promise you this feels absolutely amazing. Here...' She lifted the rabbit closer to Jian's face. Jian blinked nervously. This lapid was close enough now that she could easily smell the scent of panic and exhaustion. The musky scent of a day out and about before a bath or shower could be taken compounded by the sheer terror of being chased and captured by a carnivore. It was far sweeter than Jian had expected, and she realised that she was salivating at the lips. Almost involuntarily, her hand lifted, bracing against the back of the rabbit's head as her jaw dropped and she ran her tongue over the tear strewn fur and skin of the woman's face. 'There we go.' Mira nodded. 'Now you'll know what you want. So, am I setting up a little bed, or do we need to get this one's clothes off for you?' Jian barely processed the snow leopard's words as her tongue withdrew, the flavours dancing on her senses in ways she could not have anticipated. It was incredible. Jian wasn't sure if it was the tears or the rabbit's natural flavour, but it was unlike anything she had experienced before. Cooked, even fresh rare meat prepared by a skilled chef could not compare to the tactile sensation of knowing what you were about to eat was still... alive. 'I uh...' Jian stammered, swallowing nervously as her grip on the rabbit's fur tightened. 'I think I have to do this.' Pleading eyes stared back at her, more tears now mixing with the panda's own saliva on the rabbit's face as she shook her head, begging with an inability to form words and a desperate denial of her unfortunate reality. 'Sorry...' Jian breathed. 'It could always be worse, dear.' Mira said reassuringly as she set the rabbit back to a standing position on the sofa. 'You could have been caught by someone who likes the taste of blood. They'd nibble your limbs down to stumps piece by piece. Being swallowed alive isn't something I can imagine being comfortable, but I'm sure you'll suffocate somewhat peacefully before you feel too much of this nice panda's stomach acid. Your daughter is already starting to settle down.' 'Please stop...' The woman sobbed as Mira began undoing the buttons of her top. 'Just get it over with already... Stop talking to me. Stop trying to make me feel better. My baby is dying... And you're about to eat me too. Just do it already!' 'Arms up.' Mira instructed, lifting the shirt clear as the lapid limply complied. Once the shirt was clear, the snow leopard ran a claw behind the rabbit's back and snipped loose the bra she was wearing. She then pulled down the small woman's pants and underwear, lifting her by the scruff a moment later and taking the garments off completely with her other hand. Jian could only watch, transfixed, anticipation building despite her pangs of guilt for what she was about to do. She wondered if this is what the instinct felt like in other ursids and felids, that the desire to consume could really outweigh the empathy she was feeling right now. This small, helpless rabbit woman had been stripped naked and Jian was about to swallow her alive. Part of her mind screamed to stop, this was a horrible way to die after all. She could spare her, it was entirely within her power and Mira was willing to let the woman live. But that flavour, that intoxicating flavour. No, Jian had to have it. She had to experience all of it. She wondered if different parts of the body would have different tastes. The instant Mira set the lapid back down on shaky legs, Jian had her own hands tightly gripping her prey by the shoulders. Her prey. Yes. That's all she was now. Jian's prey. Her mouth was salivating and her jaw quivered as she lifted the shivering rabbit woman close. Her jaw was wide open as if by instinct before Jian fully realised what she was doing and in the next instant the small woman's body was pressed against the panda's tongue. She closed her jaw, holding the rabbit in place as she readjusted her hands. Now gripping the woman by her slender hips, Jian began to push her in deeper, her tongue and throat already swallowing vigorously. Once she was halfway into the panda's throat, the rabbit must have felt a renewed surge of desperation or her survival instinct kicked back into overdrive. It was an odd sensation, feeling a squirming mass of small person writhing inside her. 'Use it.' Mira advised. 'Lift her up, let her squirming make her slip down easier.' Jian did as Mira instructed, feeling the rabbit's body slip deeper into her throat just as the snow leopard had said. Her tongue slipped inadvertently between the woman's thighs as she worked to pull her deeper and she blushed in surprise. She hadn't meant to do that. She gripped the rabbit's shins and pushed her legs back together, before forcing the last of the small woman down with her hands and a series of rapid gulps. As the woman's twitching ankles and toes brushed over her tongue and vanished between the folds of her throat, Jian felt the bulk of the lapid's form as it was forced into her stomach. That was when the real sensations began. Far more pronounced than what she felt in her mouth and throat, the struggles from within her stomach were something she had tried to imagine but failed to fully grasp. It was... it was utterly sensational. She could almost tell where the rabbit's feet and hands were pressing from inside as she tried to right herself. She imagined what it must have been like inside, how cramped and unpleasant it must have been. To be coated in slimy gastric juices, churned by strong stomach musculature and surrounded by the foul smell of digesting food. How long would she last in there before her consciousness faded? How long would Jian feel her in there before she was digested enough to not be noticeable anymore? She heard a muffled cry, indistinct but she could barely make out the words begging to be let out. Before Jian could react, Mira had her hands and ears pressed to the panda's belly, listening and caressing the soft fur and feeling the faint but desperate struggles from within. 'Uhh...' Jian lifted her hands, unsure of what to make of the felid's reaction. 'A-are you okay?' 'S-sorry.' Mira smiled as she stood up. 'It's just... it's kind of sweet, you know? How intimate this all is. Sometimes it's nice to feel... N-never mind, sorry.' As Mira stepped back, still smiling, Jian pressed her own hands to her abdomen. Between the muffled crying and faint kicks, she could scarcely believe what she'd done. A live rabbit, a living person, now inside her stomach and doomed to be digested. She had thought about this for so long, and now it was reality. And yet... the guilt was still there. This person's life was about to end and it was Jian's own doing. Had she not agreed to Mira's offer... 'Oh boy...' The thoughts were hitting hard now. 'Something wrong?' Mira asked. 'This is a lot...' Jian replied. 'I'm not sure how to deal with it. Maybe it wasn't a good idea.' 'Shh...' Mira stepped closer and rested a hand gently on the panda's shoulder. 'Don't let feelings of guilt get to you. This is natural. This is how the world works. The small become prey to the large. Just relax and let your body do what it wants to do. Panda or not, you're still ursid. You just need to let your mind catch up to what your body already knows.' Jian took a few deep breaths, trying to calm down and accept what Mira was saying. She turned her eyes to the ceiling, trying to temporarily forget that two rabbits, one of them a child, were dying right there inside the two of them. Another deep breath. The movements inside her were slowing down. The cries were getting harder to hear. She didn't have much longer to change her mind if she was going to try and save this poor woman's life. 'I'm almost too scared to ask...' Jian began. 'H-how long do they usually...?' 'Not long.' Mira answered. She took Jian's hand and rested it on her own belly. 'Have a feel, the kid's almost out of stamina. Her mother won't last much longer. Your stomach is probably slightly bigger than mine, but she's bigger than her kid. They'll probably breathe their last around the same time.' Jian looked down as her hand was placed against the snow leopard's abdomen. She winced as she felt the faintest of kicks from beneath Mira's fur. 'Ohh dear...' 'Sit down.' Mira instructed. 'Just relax. A few more minutes and it won't matter anymore. And remember how much you wanted to do this.' Jian did as instructed, taking more deep breaths as she sat down and trying her best to ignore the desperate fading cries she could hear. Mira sat beside her, saying nothing but leaving a hand on the panda's shoulder for emotional support. As the next fifteen minutes went by with Jian struggling to contend with her conflicting emotions, the desperately writhing form trapped in her stomach gradually came to a stop, leaving her with a still fullness no different than if she had simply eaten a hearty meal rather than a living person. 'Better?' Mira asked. 'The little one stopped kicking too. Now they really are just food. With your belly that full, you're gonna feel pretty tired before long. Best thing is to go home, get a good night's sleep.' 'Umm, okay.' Jian nodded, still resting her hands on her belly. She wasn't quite convinced that the rabbit was actually dead yet, but at the same time it also didn't seem like trying to save her would really work out for the best either. Mira was probably right, there was nothing to do but let this all play out the way it was going to. 'Is there... anything else I should know? Like, will bones be a problem?' 'I don't think so.' Mira shook her head. 'For the size difference between you, even her skull will break apart before it goes much further through you. Of course if you want to keep that, wait about six hours and then throw up. By then it should be the only thing left in there.' 'Why would I want to keep that?' Jian asked, slightly disturbed by the idea. 'Lots of predators like to keep souvenirs.' Mira shrugged. 'Their first, their favourites, a difficult hunt that made them feel good when they finally made the catch. It's up to you. I just thought I'd make the suggestion.' 'Oh, I'll think about it...' Jian nodded slowly. 'This has all been a bit much. More um, emotional weight than I expected? I think I need to sleep on it and decide whether or not this is actually right for me.' Mira nodded slowly, then smiled. 'I understand. If you do still feel conflicted about it, I'd recommend having a chat to Firros if you see him. Je lives in the house just before yours on your way home. He has a way of obtaining prey that might be better suited to your... demeanour.' 'Oh, okay.' Jian nodded her thanks. As Mira had said, she was indeed beginning to feel drowsy. As she stood and stretched, she was unable to stifle a yawn, her movements seeming to coax a faint and brief flux of movement from her stomach. She'd been right, the rabbit was indeed still alive, even if only barely. 'I-I guess I'll keep that in mind. So it was... Firros, you said?'