
The warehouse crouched at the edge of Van Nuys like a guilty secret, its windows blacked out and its steel doors hanging half open as if the place had tried to confess and then thought better of it. Jonny and Boris stepped inside, their footsteps echoing through the dark like a pair of warrants nobody wanted served.
The smell hit first—grease, chemicals, and something else that made the back of your brain itch.
Jonny’s eyes adjusted to the gloom and then stopped dead.
Across the floor stood a tall figure in yellow and red, lit by the flicker of industrial lamps. The face paint, the grin, the circus colors—it was Ronald McDonald himself.
But what made Jonny’s jaw tighten wasn’t the clown.
It was the hair.
Perched proudly atop the clown’s painted skull was a luxurious brown toupee. Jonny knew that rug the way a safecracker knows tumblers. It was the very one that normally crowned his own noble dome.
Which meant the ridiculous red clown wig now stuck to Jonny’s head like a practical joke from a sadistic barber wasn’t a mistake.
It was theft.
Jonny’s fingers curled slowly.
Boris, meanwhile, had locked onto the man Ronald was talking to.
The pug’s breath caught in his throat.
Some faces fade with time. Others burn themselves into your memory like a branding iron.
This one had a name.
Dr. Jacob Merlinski, DVM.
The butcher of Boris’s youth.
Years ago, when Boris had stepped off the boat from Korea and onto the hopeful concrete of Ellis Island, they told him the American Dream came with paperwork. Forms. Regulations. And one small surgical procedure.
“There are already too many dogs in this country,” the officials had said with bureaucratic smiles. “If you want to stay in the Land of the Free, you’ll have to give up the equipment that makes more of you.”
And so Boris, young and hopeful, had been wheeled under bright lights and cold steel by the very man now standing across the warehouse floor.
Dr. Merlinski.
The pug felt phantom pain just looking at him.
“It’s for the greater good,” they had said.
But now Boris noticed something else.
A conveyor belt.
It rattled across the warehouse like a mechanical confession. Hundreds—no, thousands—of freshly hacked-off doggy ballsacks slid along the belt in a grisly parade of lost legacies.
They disappeared into a humming stainless-steel machine.
Ronald and the doctor watched the process with the satisfied chuckles of men who thought they’d beaten the system.
The machine whirred.
Ground.
Pressed.
Breaded.
A chute opened.
Golden nuggets spilled out onto a tray beneath a heat lamp.
Boris stared.
His already oversized eyes widened until they looked like two dinner plates staring into hell.
McNuggets.
Chicken McNuggets.
The truth landed on him like a freight train full of broken promises.
He hadn’t been welcomed to America.
He’d been processed.
His crown jewels… sacrificed on the altar of fast food.
Deep fried.
And served with tangy barbecue or honey mustard.
Boris’s lip curled back, revealing teeth that hadn’t forgotten how to bite.
Beside him, Jonny slowly cracked his knuckles.
The clown laughed.
The doctor laughed.
But they hadn’t noticed the two detectives standing in the shadows yet.
And if there was one thing Van Nuys had taught Jonny and Boris, it was this:
Nobody laughs forever.








