raised an eyebrow. “Yeah? What’s that? I already told you the bank’s closed.”
“Some neck lightning.” He pulled a necklace from his pocket and offered it to her.
Evie gasped. “Holy smokes! That looks like a real diamond on there! Where’d you get this?”
“Would you believe a generous aunt?”
“No.”
“Didn’t think so. Where I got it, they won’t miss it. They got plenty.”
Evie sighed. “Sam…”
“I know their type. They don’t care what happens to anyone but themselves. They buy everything the magazines and billboards tell them to and forget about it when something new comes along.”
“And Uncle Will thinks I’m cynical!” Evie shoved the necklace back into Sam’s jacket pocket. “You can’t just go around taking things that don’t belong to you, Sam.”
“Why not? If captains of industry do it, they’re heroes. If little people like me do it, we’re criminals.”
“Now you sound like a Bolshevik. Say, you’re not one of those anarchists, are you?”
“Bombs and revolution? Not my style. I’ve got my own mission,” Sam said, the last part coming out a bit hard.
“What mission is that? Leading girls astray with stolen gems?”
Sam gave her a sideways glance. “You ever hear of something called Project Buffalo?”
“Can’t say that I have.”
“Well, if you look for any information on it, you won’t find it. It was a secret government operation during the war.”
“Then how do you know about it?”
“My mother went to work on it. She took some kind of test—”
“A test? What…?”
“Don’t know. Whatever it was, she scored pretty high. She and my father had a big fight about it. I heard ’em in the other room. She said she felt she had to go. ‘What can we do?’ she said. My father said no. My father loves the word no.” Sam’s face clouded. “Anyway, maybe a month later, these fellas from the government showed up. They had my dad’s papers. Told him they could send him back to Russia if he didn’t cooperate. My dad wasn’t going back to Russia to starve or be killed. He had a nice house and a fur business. So that night, my mother packed her things and left. She sent us only one letter. Most of it had been blacked over. But she said they were doing good work, important work for the country. She said it would change mankind. And then we never heard from her again. When my father wrote to them, they said she’d died from influenza. I was eight.”
“I’m sorry. That’s terrible.” In the afternoon sun, the city shimmered like a mirage. “Sam Lloyd doesn’t sound very Russian, though.”
“Sergei Lubovitch. My father changed our last name to Lloyd when he and my mother came through New York. When I was born, he insisted they name me Sam. As in Uncle.”
“I thought you looked familiar,” Evie teased. “Where’s your father now?”
“Back in Chicago, I suppose.”
“You don’t know?”
“My father and I didn’t get along too well. He likes to say no, and I’m supposed to say yes. He didn’t like it when I could say no myself. And he sure didn’t like it when I said I wanted to find out what really happened to Mama.”
“I thought you said she died.”
“That’s what they told us. Two years ago, I got this.” He pulled the worn postcard of trees and mountains from his pocket. Evie pretended it was the first time she’d seen it.
“Pretty. Where is this?”
“I don’t know. That phrase on the back, there. It’s Russian.”