I hadn’t expected to have been woken up so early. Or, more importantly, in such a manner. I had sort of hoped for a cup of tea and maybe a nice bacon roll from the canteen.
And a bit of a chat.
Instead, a student nurse woke me up by running through the corridors screaming “Matron!”
The next thing I knew, Anne was standing over me. She threw my stuff at me. “You need to leave.”
She was lovely. This wasn’t a Brunhilde thing.
“Now!”
So much for bedside manner, I thought to myself as I climbed through the only way out, a window, and jumped to the frosty ground.
Apparently, I wasn’t the only one getting their vitals checked that night. Definitely two, maybe three, other guys were climbing out of other windows, and they joined me legging it across the quad in various states of undress, carrying the rest of their stuff that they hadn’t had time to put on.
One lad was barefoot.
On one side, a group of older guys, probably janitors, maintenance guys, and delivery drivers were smoking their fags. They cheered us loudly.
On the other side, a group of doctors, smoking their pipes, nodded at us. Their eyes twinkling with the memories of their youth.