Liam rumbled through the draws for the hundredth time, “It can’t just disappear, try tracking it again.”
His sister clomped her black ankle boots towards him from the passage, trampling on glass, cracking it with her heels, the noise not bothering either of them.
Her legs encased in a vintage pair of dark maroon leather pants, she lifted up the sleeve of her black and silver jersey which sat loosely on her bodice and pushed her open blonde wavy hair back. Her Australian accent rushed through the room, “I have done it over and over again, if it was here I’d know.”
“Nobody knows about the necklace beside the three of us, I delivered it myself, who would take it.”
He looked at the girl, her eyes greener than the summer's grass, shinier than a gemstone in the sun, the eyes of his mother. “Liam I don’t even know much about the necklace myself, you still haven’t told me what’s it for? the scent tells me it’s strong, and that brother always equals trouble.”