Subject 01 — Canis longus
He does not ask permission. He does not require validation. He simply exists — at unusual length.
The dachshund was engineered by the state to descend into tunnels and retrieve badgers. Dennis does not care about badgers. Dennis has transcended his original mandate. He operates on pure instinct and an unwavering sense of personal authority.
Four legs. Two are load-bearing. The body is a structural achievement — a monument to biological audacity. Architecture critics have noted the cantilevered torso. Structural engineers remain baffled. Dennis remains unbothered.
He will sit in a shaft of sunlight for six hours and call it work. He will bark at a frequency you cannot hear. He will occupy the exact center of the couch and negotiate nothing. This is not stubbornness. This is ideology.
| Subject | Dennis |
| Classification | Canis lupus var. teckel |
| Body Type | Extended / Standard |
| Leg Height | Insufficient |
| Ears | Floor-Adjacent |
| Original Purpose | Badger Retrieval |
| Current Purpose | Presence. Authority. |
| Threat Level | Perceived: Low Actual: Total |
| Fetch Compliance | 0% |
| Nap Hours / Day | 18–22 |
| Stubbornness | ∞ |
leg height to body ratio
will to exist loudly
Canonical profile. The long body is not a flaw. It is the thesis.
Locomotion study. The gait is confident. The destination is irrelevant.
Architectural review. The proportions defy convention. Convention is wrong.
"The dachshund is not a small dog that thinks it is big. It is a correct dog that everyone else has failed to understand."— Dennis, presumably