lawyers with something."
This had occurred to Henry, though he had said nothing about it to Charlotte. Only a few days ago she had learned that her legal victory had been reversed. The news had struck her hard. Winning that case had at last justified her crusade, not only against Fanning and the town but against her larger enemy: that general encroachment of money and waste and display. Having it taken away had crumpled something in her. Her hectoring voice had grown subdued. When he'd once more mentioned the idea of moving, she had made none of her usual protests. Knowing that he was going to be in Boston, he'd asked Helen to set up an appointment at the assisted-living home that Cott Jr. had recommended, and he and Charlotte were scheduled for a visit there that afternoon.
What good would it do now to share the news of Fanning's downfall? It would only give her false hope. Even if the man were forced to sell, the house itself wasn't going anywhere.
He took a bite of lobster, letting his lack of response to Holland speak for itself.
"Fanning's not my concern," he said eventually. "Perhaps we could proceed to business?"
"Of course."
"Let me start by saying that if you or your board is under the impression that Union Atlantic is too big to fail, you're mistaken. There's no question here of a bailout. If you go under, the markets will take a substantial hit, but with enough liquidity in the system we can cut you loose. I hope you understand that."
This, of course, was a bluff. Henry had already begun receiving calls from the Treasury Department. The secretary was confident, his deputies said in their transparent euphemism, that the Federal Reserve shared his concern about market stability. Translation: the White House is watching this one. The administration, while opposed under free market theory to the government rescue of a failing corporation, didn't want to see Union Atlantic fall apart. There were perfectly prudential reasons for this, many of which Henry agreed with, but the chatter coming out of the executive branch at the moment suggested another concern: the argument for the invasion of Iraq was hitting its stride now, and an event of this size could change the domestic and congressional equation. They didn't want distractions. That was the gist of it. By all means avoid the appearance of rewarding speculators - no moral hazard - but now's not the time for stringency.
Would he feel the satisfaction of justice done if an operator like Holland were brought to heel? Of course. Who wouldn't? But whatever spleen the liberals liked to vent on the captains of industry, there were certain hard facts that had little to do with individual actors. Five hundred points off the Dow was one thing. Disruption of the credit markets was another. Dry up the lending system and the losses would no longer redound to the investor class alone. The man working for the Texas theme-park company that had been bought out with leveraged debt it could no longer service would lose his paycheck soon enough. As a general matter, particularly in the mouths of politicians, Henry disliked the use of personal anecdotes to illustrate the workings of the economy. They were almost always a distortion, a falsely simple story of cause and effect. Truth lay in the aggregate numbers, not in the images of citizens the media alighted upon for a minute or two and then quickly left behind. Currency devaluations created more misery than any corporate criminal ever would. What the populist critics rarely bothered to countenance was the shape of things in the wake of real, systemic collapse. In Argentina, the middle class was picking through garbage dumps. The failure of Union Atlantic wouldn't deliver the country there, but then again, these were uncertain times. And whose risk was that to take?
"I don't think anyone's talking about a bailout," Holland said. "We're talking about capital injections. I think you'd agree, the brand has value, not to mention assets. All we're looking for is a way to reassure potential investors."
"You're talking to the Emirates?"
"Among others, yes. We've got some interest in Singapore as well. The issue is the timing. I've got seventy-two hours to make a margin call. That's not very long to roll out a sales pitch. If Citi or Morgan or someone of that scale were to come on board, even in a symbolic way, it would make a big difference."
Holland dipped his head to one side