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had done but she wasn't, after all, the person in charge. As best she could tell, the protections for a person in her position weren't worth the paper they were written on. It wasn't only her hopes she was jeopardizing by being here.
Henry Graves's welcoming expression had been replaced by a more sober, businesslike concern.
"I can't say for sure," she said. "You're probably wondering if it's because I have some grudge against Fanning. I don't care for him but that's not why I'm here. Maybe I'm just tired of worrying."
"My staff is going to need to debrief you," he said. "If it's okay with you, I'd like to do that right away."
She nodded and he reached for a phone on the side table. As he talked with his deputy, Evelyn looked about the office again. It was smaller than many occupied by the senior executives at Atlantic Securities and without the views. Perhaps she was only imagining it, then, this sense of imperturbable calm and yet it seemed manifest to her sitting there encased in those heavy stone walls, the gilt-framed paintings looking down from the wall, as the grandfatherly white man in his jacket and tie took the situation in hand.
She wondered if this were the feeling that so many people out there in the country hungered for: a sense of continuity, gone or never present in so many lives.
Give me one thing that won't change. Just one.
Daddy will take care of the money.
The dealers whose henchmen had shot Carson knew the need for this feeling as well as anyone, and they used it every day. But here in the undying realm of the central bank no violence was required. Here the aristocrats of bureaucracy guarded money's permanent interests. Part of her wanted never to leave this room with its promise of the cessation of all struggle. And yet to recognize this longing was to see herself as a traitor. To what, she wasn't entirely sure. Life perhaps. Or the belief in it.
"We're all set," Henry said, putting down the phone. "Are you ready?"
Chapter 16
"Where are you?" Sabrina asked.
"I don't know. Twenty-eight, maybe. Twenty-nine."
"Wow," she said. "If you're not careful, you might actually become interesting."
From the office where he had wound up, Doug could see over Four Point Channel and across the corner of the harbor to the new federal courthouse with its slanting glass façade and a row of flags out front, fluttering in the breeze.
"So here's the deal," Sabrina said. "Holland wants you at the Ritz for the deal closing with Taconic; McTeague's called three times; you've got a message from Mikey to contact him ASAP; the guy you hired to erase our e-mails says someone's messing with his program; some official-sounding Chinese guy from the Singapore Exchange wanted to confirm your mailing address at eight this morning; Evelyn Jones is on vacation; and some kid named Nate called to say he was waiting for you 'in the room.' Which I'm not even going to touch. You think just maybe you could turn your phone on?"
In the last few weeks, Doug had begun to wander like this. Using the stairs, he'd head down to floors of the tower he'd never visited before, the reception areas distinguishable only by the pallor of the ferns and the colors of the abstract paintings hung over the leather chairs. Departments whose staff he could once have recited by name had doubled or tripled in size, filling whole floors. Nodding at the smiling secretaries, saying the occasional word to the middle managers surprised in the corridor, all of them as ignorant as could be of how untenable the bank's predicament had become, he'd wind up in the office of someone down in consumer credit or government relations who was out for the day, and there he'd sit in the quiet with the door closed and his phone off, trying again and again to order his thoughts.
Through July and August the Nikkei index had shed another twelve hundred points; the Japanese Ministry of Finance, criticized for their earlier intervention, had done nothing to prevent the slide. McTeague's losses had ballooned. They were larger now than the value of Atlantic Securities itself.
But then again, hardly anyone knew. If some deputy department head occasionally bothered to e-mail Doug, inquiring about loans from one division after another to an obscure subsidiary named Finden Holdings, he didn't bother to reply. Even Holland seemed to have voided the problem from his mind, entertaining clients at Red Sox