“This is Nurse Veena Chandra,” the head nurse said when the women had reached the station. At the same moment, the elevator arrived and out stepped one of the uniformed guards Jennifer had seen downstairs. Since he just seemed to be lingering in the background, Jennifer sensed that the head nurse had called down when she’d been out of sight.
Veena greeted Jennifer, palms together. Jennifer tried to imitate the gesture. Veena was even more beautiful up close, with flawless bronze skin and stunning green eyes, which Jennifer found mesmerizing. The problem was the eyes didn’t engage hers except for fleeting moments before looking away, as if Veena was bashful or somehow self-conscious being in Jennifer’s presence.
“I’m Jennifer. Mrs. Hernandez’s granddaughter.”
“Yes, Nurse Kumar has told me.”
“Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?”
Veena exchanged a quick uncertain glance with her head nurse, who nodded that it was okay.
“I don’t mind.”
“Maybe we could step over to those chairs by the window,” Jennifer said, pointing to a small sitting area with a modern couch and two chairs. Jennifer felt crowded by the head nurse and the clerk, who were standing like statues, hanging on every word.
Veena again looked to Nurse Kumar, which began to confuse Jennifer. The woman was acting as if she were twelve, whereas Jennifer guessed she was in her twenties, even if just barely. She was acting as if she would have preferred being anywhere but where she was, facing a conversation with Jennifer.
Nurse Kumar shrugged and gestured toward the sitting area.
“I hope I’m not making you uncomfortable,” Jennifer said to Veena as they walked over and sat down. “I didn’t even know my grandmother was in India when I learned she had died. So I’m not very happy about her death, to put it mildly, and I’m looking into it to a degree.”
“No, you’re not making me uncomfortable,” Veena replied tensely. “I’m fine.” For a brief moment the image of Maria Hernandez’s contorting face flashed in her mind’s eye.
“You are acting very nervous,” Jennifer commented, trying vainly to make sustained eye contact.
“Maybe I’m afraid you are angry with me.”
Jennifer reflexively laughed, not loud but more in surprise. “Why would I be angry with you? You helped by grandmother. My goodness. No, I’m not angry. I’m thankful.”
Veena nodded but seemed unconvinced, although she did allow herself more eye contact.
“I just wanted to ask you how she was? Did she seem happy? Did she suffer at all?”
“She was fine. She wasn’t suffering. She even talked about you. She told me you were becoming a doctor.”
“That’s true,” Jennifer said. She wasn’t surprised. Her grandmother was extremely proud of what Jennifer had done, and to Jennifer’s chagrin bragged about it to anyone who would listen. Jennifer tried to think of what else to ask. She actually hadn’t given it a lot of prior thought. “Was it you who found Maria after her apparent heart attack?”
“No!” Veena said comparatively explosively. “No, no,” she repeated. “Mrs. Hernandez died on the evening shift. I work days. I’m off at three-thirty. I was home. This is my first month working here. I work days with supervision.”
Jennifer regarded the young nurse, who was, in actuality, a contemporary. Jennifer couldn’t help but feel there was something amiss, as if they weren’t quite on the same wavelength. “Can I ask you a couple of personal questions?”
Veena nodded hesitantly.
“Have you recently graduated from nursing school?”
“About three months ago,” Veena said, nodding.
“Is my grandmother the first patient you’ve lost?”
“Yes, she was,” Veena said with another nod. “The first private patient.”
“I’m sorry. It’s never easy, whether you’re the doctor, the nurse, or even the medical student, and I’m certainly not angry with you. The fates, maybe, but not you. I don’t know if you are religious, but if you are, doesn’t your religion provide a source of comfort? I mean, apparently, it was my grandmother’s karma to leave this life, and maybe in her next life she won’t have to work quite so hard. She really worked hard all her life, and not for herself. She was truly a generous person. The best.”
When Jennifer saw Veena’s eyes glaze over with tears, she felt she had figured out the source of the nurse’s distress. Granny had been her first death as a real nurse, a difficult milestone, which Jennifer could certainly relate to. “You are a dear for caring so much,” Jennifer added. “I don’t mean to make you feel uncomfortable. But I do have a few more questions. Do you know much about my grandmother’s actual death? I mean, like, who found her and what were the circumstances? Even what time it was?”
“It was Theru Wadhwa who found her when he went in to see if she wanted sleep medication,” Veena said, wiping the corners of her eyes with a knuckle. “He thought she was asleep until he noticed her eyes were open. I asked him about it last night when he came to work, since she was my patient and all.”
“What time was it, do you know?” Jennifer asked. Having uncovered the young woman’s secret and broached the issue, Jennifer expected she’d relax. But such was not the case. If anything, she seemed even more anxious. Her hands were working at each other in her lap as if in a wrestling match.
“Around ten-thirty.”
“Since you talked directly with the nurse, did he describe her in any particular way? I mean, did she look calm, like it was an easy death? Did he say anything like that?”
“He said she looked blue when he turned the lights on and called a code.”
“So they tried to revive her?”
“Only briefly. He said it was apparent she was dead. There was no cardiac activity at all, and she was cool and already a little stiff.”
“That’s dead, alright. What about the blueness? Do you know if he meant more gray or really blue?”
Veena looked off as if thinking. Her hands detached from each other gripped the arms of the chair. “I think he meant blue.”
“Cyanosis-like blue?”
“I think so. That’s what I assumed.”
“That’s curious for a heart attack.”
“It is?” Veena asked, somewhat surprised.
“Did he say allover blue or just, like, blue lips and blue fingertips.”
“I don’t know. I think allover blue.”
“What about Mr. Benfatti?” Jennifer asked, rapidly switching the subject. She’d suddenly remembered stories of so-called angels of death, healthcare serial killers, who also were the ones who “found” their victims after the fact, sometimes to try to save them.
“What about Mr. Benfatti?” Veena questioned, startled.
“Did Nurse Wad-something happen to find him as well last night?” Jennifer asked. She knew the answer would be no, but she had to ask it anyway.
“No,” Veena blurted. “Mr. Benfatti wasn’t on this floor. He was on three. I don’t know who found Mr. Benfatti.”
“Ms. Hernandez!” a voice called from behind Jennifer. Startled, Jennifer turned and looked up. It was Head Nurse Kumar, who’d walked over from the central desk.
“I’m afraid Ms. Chandra has to get back to her patient. Also, I called down to Mrs. Kashmira Varini to let her know that you were here. She asked me to ask you to come by her office. She said you knew where it was. I’m sure she can handle any more questions you might have.” Nurse Kumar motioned for Veena to return to her charge.