was sitting on top of him, panting and whining.
“Yes sir,” I said. “Opal,” the preacher said again. “Yes sir,” I said louder. “Do you know what a pathological fear is?” “No sir,” I told him.
The preacher raised a hand. He rubbed his nose. “Well,” he said, after a
minute, “it’s a fear that goes way beyond normal fears. It’s a fear you can’t be talked out of or reasoned out of.”
Just then there was another crack of thunder and Winn-Dixie rose straight
up in the air like somebody had poked him with something hot. When he hit the floor, he started running. He ran back to my bedroom, and I didn’t even try to catch him; I just got out of his way.
The preacher lay there on the ground, rubbing his nose. Finally, he sat up.
He said, “Opal, I believe Winn-Dixie has a pathological fear of thunderstorms.” And just when he finished his sentence, here came Winn-Dixie again, running to save his life. I got the preacher up off the floor and out of the way just in time.
There didn’t seem to be a thing we could do for Winn-Dixie to make him
feel better, so we just sat there and watched him run back and forth, all terrorized and panting. And every time there was another crack of thunder, Winn-Dixie acted all over again like it was surely the end of the world.
“The storm won’t last long,” the preacher told me. “And when it’s over, the
real Winn-Dixie will come back.”
After a while, the storm did end. The rain stopped. And there wasn’t any
more lightning, and finally, the last rumble of thunder went away and Winn-Dixie quit running back and forth and came over to where me and the preacher were sitting and cocked his head, like he was saying, “What in the world are you two doing out of bed in the middle of the night?”
And then he crept up on the couch with us in this funny way he has, where
he gets on the couch an inch at a time, kind of sliding himself onto it, looking off in a different direction, like it’s all happening by accident, like he doesn’t intend to get on the couch, but all of a sudden, there he is.
And so the three of us sat there. I rubbed Winn-Dixie’s head and scratched
him behind the ears the way he liked. And the preacher said, “There are an awful lot of thunderstorms in Florida in the summertime.”
“Yes sir,” I said. I was afraid that maybe he would say we couldn’t keep a
dog who went crazy with pathological fear every time there was a crack of thunder.
“We’ll have to keep an eye on him,” the preacher said. He put his arm