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Looking for God While Naked and Standing in a Foot of Snow
by Don Drewniak

It was a cold mid-November afternoon during my sophomore year in college. I pulled my car into a parking area next to the dorm in which my long-time friend Lenny had a room at the University of Massachusetts in the college town of Amherst.

I had a date that evening with a girl I dated throughout the previous summer back in Fall River, Massachusetts. She had been in my graduating class at BMC Durfee High School and was now a student at UMass.

There was a scribbled note taped to the door of Lenny’s room that read, “In the library third floor.” It was shortly before five in the afternoon when I found him seated at a table with a book, notebook and an assortment of pens and pencils.

“How’s it going?” I whispered.

“Rotten,” he replied loud enough to draw the attention of a dozen or so students sitting nearby. Lowering his voice, he continued, “I’m flunking two courses. F’n German is killing me.”

I’m a bit hazy on this, but I think he needed two years of German in order to apply for whatever program he wanted to take in his junior year.

He plopped everything he had on the table into a knapsack and said, “Let’s go eat.”

It was off to a cafeteria where he put together a supper. I opted for a bottle of Coke from a machine as the date included dinner at a local restaurant and the viewing of The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm at a nearby theater.

As soon as I walked into his room after the date, I could see that Lenny was smashed. He was sitting on the edge of his bottom bunk holding a pint of whiskey. An empty pint was on the floor. I assumed it was cheap stuff as I didn’t recognize the brand name. He had on one piece of clothing, boxer shorts.

Also in the room were his roommate and two others, one of whom I remembered from a previous visit. He was a backup lineman for the UMass football team, about six feet, two inches tall and probably slightly over two hundred pounds. The others were nondescript guys who were an inch or two shorter than my five eleven. All three were holding cans of beer and seemed to be sober.

“Toss ‘im a beer,” slurred Lenny.

I caught a can of Schlitz.

Lenny began to babble pure nonsense as he took a slug of the whiskey.

“Lenny, you’ve had enough. Give me the bottle,” said his roommate.

“Nobody gonna take it.”

The big guy stepped up and grabbed it. Lenny took a wild swing at him that missed. He then popped up to his feet and bolted out the doorway.

At this point, I can’t remember who said what.

“Probably puking in the men’s room.”

“We better check.”

Off we went. There was one guy taking a leak.

“Lenny come in here?”

“Nope.”

“Shit. We better find him.”

We checked another head and a shower. No soap. Down we went to the first floor, again checking the heads and showers. No Lenny.

“Hey, look at this.” There was fresh puke and Lenny’s boxers on the floor near a side door. It looked like he had tried to clean up the puke using the boxers.

“Shit!”

Out we went. He was about twenty feet away from us standing in a foot or so of snow.

“The asshole will freeze to death.”

Lenny had his hands raised over his head and was yelling, “God, where are you? God, where are you?”

The big guy said to me, “Stay here. Don’t let the door shut. We’d be locked out and going through the main doors might cause problems.”

He then bolted through the snow and wrapped Lenny in a bear hug. The other two grabbed a foot each and back they came. It was up a flight of stairs and into the room.

We dried him off, dropped him onto his bunk and covered him with blankets. He was asleep seconds later.

“Anyone know where I’m supposed to bunk?” I asked.

“Eighth door down on the right. Door’s unlocked. Lock it if the guy in there is asleep. Take the top bunk.”

As he said that, I detected a slight laugh from the big guy. That should have raised a red flag, but it didn’t. Fortunately, I left most of my stuff in Lenny’s room.

I took care of necessities and off I went. The light in the room came from a waxing gibbous moon. I locked the door. Whoever was in the bottom bunk seemed dead to the world. Up I climbed into the top bunk. Exhausted, I dozed off.

I awoke to the sound of radio static.

What the hell?

Checking my watch, it was just after three-thirty. “Where’s that static coming from?” I asked.

A somewhat high-pitched voice replied, “Isn’t it beautiful? Come down to my bed and we can listen to it together.”

Son-of-a bitch! Lenny set me up!

Dropping down to the floor, I grabbed my shoes, the few items I had left on a desktop and two blankets from the top bunk. Out the door I went.

The bastard set me up. The bastard set me up.

I rapped on Lenny’s door. The roommate opened it and began to laugh.

“So you knew about it!”

“So did the two who were here before. That’s why the empty bunk. He doesn’t have a roommate.” With that he laughed as tears dropped from his eyes.

Meanwhile, Lenny was still dead to world. “Is he alive?”

“Yah,”

“Too bad,” I replied.

He carefully removed Lenny’s two blankets from him, folded one in half and placed it by the door. He also took a spare pillow from a closet and dropped it at the end of the floored blanket.

“Grab Lenny's two wrists. I’ll get his feet.” We carried him over to the folded blanket and deposited him on his new bed. Lenny was moaning as more gibberish came out of his mouth. We covered him and he became silent.

“Is he always like this?”

“Only on Saturday nights when he can’t get a date. Never this bad. He’s flunking big-time and I think he finally realizes he’s going to flunk out. He’s a bright guy, but he picked some tough courses. Also, he messed around back in September and dug himself into a hole.”

I got up around eight. Lenny was awake and claimed to have a “monster” headache.

“Good, I hope it stays with you the rest of your life.”

“Did you have a good time with Tommy last night?” he laughed

“He was disappointed that you didn’t come for your usual Saturday night sleepover.”

“Bullshit.”

From the “All’s Well That Ends Well” Department: Lenny and I next met during the Christmas break.

“The Uke?” asked Lenny.

“Let’s go.”

During Fall River’s heyday (1870–1920), it had approximately 120 cotton manufacturing mills. A dozen or more were located in the Globe section of the city where I lived. At that time in my life, all the mills had gone out of business.

One of the mills had a separate office building located diagonally across from my maternal grandfather and grandmother’s house. A strong-armed baseball player could have hit it throwing a baseball from in front of their house. I tried it once. The baseball fell woefully short and rolled into a sewer.

When the mill went under in either the late 30s or early 40s, St. John’s Ukrainian Catholic Church bought the building and named it the Ukrainian National Home. Used by the church for banquets and other special occasions, it became known as “The Uke.” By the late 1950s, church membership had dwindled to the point wherein it could not afford to maintain the building.

It was sold and a bar/restaurant named The Uke opened in 1959 in the basement of the building. It featured outstanding Polish and Portuguese food.

We each had two beers and half of a loaf of Portuguese bread stuffed with chorizo.

Long story short. Two or three days after my visit to UMass, Lenny dropped out. His freshman year grades were good enough to get him into a business-oriented college from which he ultimately graduated. He then built a highly successful business.