Mary Morris is the author of several novels and short story collections, including The Red House (Doubleday, 2025), Gateway to the Moon, House Arrest, and The Jazz Palace, as well as five acclaimed travel memoirs, among them All the Way to the Tigers. The recipient of the Rome Prize in Literature and the 2016 Anisfield-Wolf Award for Fiction, Morris lives in Brooklyn with her family and teaches writing at Sarah Lawrence College.

Photograph by Zoé Fisher.

A Dangerous Creature

A Story

by Mary Morris

The dog is a rescue. He was dumped from a moving car right in front of Dr. Katz’s office. Pete, the vet technician, was on the stoop, smoking a cigarette, when it happened. Dropped like a sack of potatoes, Pete told Dr. Katz. Pete picked up the dog—a mangy black-and-white with deep dark eyes—and brought him to Dr. Katz, who was finishing up a Rottweiler with glass in its paw. The dog is a mongrel—a Lab and something-else mix. Maybe shepherd or border collie. Dr. Katz isn’t sure. A gentle dog. About two years old. He is mostly white but with a black tail and black patches, including one that encircles his left eye. The minute Roger Katz lays eyes on the dog he knows he’ll call him Pirate.

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