"This is your fault," Jason muttered.

"How is this my fault?" Kimberly asked, trying not to laugh.

"I only brought it here so you could see it, too," he pointed out, turning his head to glare at her.

She did laugh, then. And she rolled her eyes, too, just to add insult to injury. "Yeah, because I never go to Trini's house, so there's no way I could have ever seen it there. Face it, Jase, you just wanted to show off and now you got yourself in trouble."

"There wouldn't be any trouble if this rabbit would just cooperate."

"Alright, alright," Kim said, crouching down next to him and grinning wickedly. "I'll help you catch him. Maybe he'll come to me, since I'm less big and scary than you are."

She wormed her way carefully under the table where their quarry was hiding, making sure not to disturb any of the chairs or make any sudden movements that might startle the rabbit. "Hey there, little guy," she crooned softly, slowly extending one arm so the rabbit could sniff at her hand and see that she meant no harm.

"That's a good little -"

She cut herself off and frowned when it became obvious that the rabbit had no intention of behaving. It skittered out from under the table as soon as she got close, making its way toward the workout mats. And it didn't just walk. It pranced.

Kim groaned. "Jason, when you went to the pet store, did you ask for the most obnoxious rabbit they had, or what?"

"What? No," he retorted, annoyed that she would criticize his choice. "I thought they were supposed to be cute, cuddly little things. Not... this."

She sighed. "Alright, let's see if we can catch him. And hope that Trini can tame him."