Vienna
S
ergeant Major Reinhold von
Rumpel is forty-one years old, not so old that he cannot be
promoted. He has moist red lips; pale, almost translucent cheeks like fillets of raw sole; and an
instinct for correctness that rarely fails him. He has a wife who
suffers his absences without
complaint, and who arranges porcelain kittens by color, lightest to darkest, on two different
shelves in their drawing room in Stuttgart. He also has two daughters whom he has not seen in nine
months.
The eldest, Veronika, is deeply earnest. Her letters to him include phrases like
sacred
resolve, proud accomplishments,
and
unparalleled in history
.
Von Rumpel’s particular gift is for diamonds: he can facet and polish stones as well as any
Aryan
jeweler in Europe, and he often spots fakes at a glance. He studied crystallography in
Munich, apprenticed as a polisher in Antwerp, has even been—one glorious afternoon—to
Charterhouse Street in London, to an unmarked diamond house, where he was asked to turn out his
pockets and ushered up three staircases and through three locked doors and seated at a table where
a man with a mustache waxed to knifepoints let him examine a ninety-two-carat raw diamond from
South Africa.
Before the war, the life of Reinhold von Rumpel was pleasant enough: he was a gemologist who
ran an appraisal business out of a second-story shop behind Stuttgart’s old chancellery. Clients
would bring in stones and he’d tell them what they were worth. Sometimes he’d recut diamonds or
consult on high-level faceting projects. If occasionally he cheated a customer, he told himself that
was part of the game.
Because of the war, his job has expanded. Now Sergeant Major von Rumpel has the chance to
do what no one has done in centuries—not since the Mogul Dynasty, not since the Khans. Perhaps
not in history. The capitulation of France is only weeks past, and already he has seen things he did
not dream he would see in six lifetimes. A seventeenth-century globe as big around as a small car,
with rubies to mark volcanoes, sapphires clustered at the poles, and diamonds for world capitals.
He has held—held!—a dagger handle at
least four hundred years old, made of white jade and
inlaid with emeralds. Just yesterday, on the road to Vienna, he took possession of a five-hundred-
and-seventy-piece china set with a single marquise-cut diamond set into the rim of every single
dish. Where the police confiscated these treasures and from whom, he does not ask. Already he has
personally packed them into a crate and belted it shut and numbered it with white paint and seen it
loaded inside a train car where it sits under twenty-four-hour guard.
Waiting to be sent to high command. Waiting for more.
This particular summer afternoon, in a dusty geological library in Vienna, Sergeant Major von
Rumpel follows an underweight secretary wearing brown shoes, brown stockings, a brown skirt,
and a brown blouse through stacks of periodicals. The secretary sets down a stepstool, climbs,
reaches.
Tavernier’s 1676
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