by Mehul
SrivastavaMaria Petrakis
June 20,
2015 — 12:30 PM EEST Updated on June 21, 2015 — 11:20 AM EEST
Bloomberg
Dorothea
Lambros stood outside an HSBC branch in central Athens on Friday afternoon, an envelope
stuffed with cash in one hand and a 38,000 euro ($43,000) cashier’s check in
the other.
She was a
few minutes too late to make her deposit at the London-based bank. She was too
scared to take her life-savings back to her Greek bank. She worried it wouldn’t
survive the weekend.
“I don’t
know what happens on Monday,” said Lambros, a 58-year-old government employee.
Nobody
does. Every shifting deadline, every last-gasp effort has built up to this: a
nation that went to sleep on Friday not knowing what Monday will bring. A deal,
or more brinkmanship. Shuttered banks and empty cash machines, or a few more
days of euros in their pockets and drachmas in their past - - and maybe their
future.