My landlady died in the fire that consumed her house, but the rescue squad was able to pull her unconscious dog, Shiloh, out of the flames and breathe life back into him. They revived him by wrapping a hand around his muzzle to keep it closed and huffing air into his nose. He woke—I am told; I was passed out drunk at the time—coughing up smoke like an old man. I live in an old slave cottage behind the main house that Mrs. Cunningham restored for renters. One of the firemen roused me some time later, and I stumbled out onto the lawn in my underwear, already hungover. The fire was nearly out and the house was soaked and shadowy in the darkness, a faint mist rising from the walls and tiny, still-burning embers winking in the wasted frame like cigarettes.

Shiloh was an enormous German shepherd, who relished tipping my trash cans and who couldn’t get past his genetic predisposition for shepherding. Each day when I returned from work he met me at the car, determined to prevent me from reach…