Igor Pedin, a former ship’s cook, was home in Mariupol, Ukraine, in April when Russian troops began going door-to-door, shooting people at will, said Daniel Boffey in The Guardian (U.K.). Pedin, 61, fled the port city, setting out on foot for what ended up being a 140-mile trek across the war-torn country with his 9-year-old mongrel terrier, Zhu-Zhu. The dog often had to rest, lick her sore paws, and be carried up hills, Pedin says, but he told her: “If you don’t walk, we will both die.” They trudged through a hellscape of destruction, sidestepping mines, seeing burning homes and dead bodies, and passing through 24 Russian checkpoints before finally arriving at the relatively safe city of Zaporizhzhia. Now in the capital city, Kyiv, Zhu-Zhu is fearful of the…