That has to have been one of the weirdest classes I’ve ever attended, Zahi thought, thankful that it was her last day in the unit. She turned and almost ran out of the ward, rejoicing in her freedom. A wild, uncontrollable urge to give vent to her amusement overcame her and she hung over the balcony rail and laughed until the tears came into her eyes. “s**t, another call from the ER,” grumbled Arvind, as he put down the phone. He was the junior house physician in the unit where Rahul was posted for his Medicine internship. “Rahul, can you go and see this patient?” He tore off a scrap of paper on which he had scribbled the patient’s details, and handed it to Rahul, who set off at once. Calls from the medical officers down in the ER were notoriously inaccurate in their assessment of the ur

