"How? What was he doing?"
"Er, you could say he had our lad"s full attention. A real streetfighter."
"Poor little soul. He was a good dog at heart."
And once again words that would have sounded trite and wrong on anyone else"s lips were redeemed by the way Carrot said them.
"And what about Tantony?" said Vimes.
"Left this morning, Lady Sybil said."
"Good grief! And Wolfgang played noughts and crosses on his chest!"
"Igor"s a dab hand with a needle, sir."
Afterwards, a thoughtful Sam Vimes stepped out into the coach yard. An Igor was already loading the luggage.
"Er, which one are you?" said Vimes.
"Igor, marthter."
"Ah. Right. And, er, are you happy here, Igor? We could do with a... man of your talents in the Watch, and no mistake."
Igor looked down from the top of the coach: "In Ankh-Morpork, marthter? My word. Everyone wantth to go to Ankh-Morpork, marthter. It"th a very tempting offer. But I know where my duty lieth, your exthellenthy. I mutht get the plathe ready for the next exthellenthy."
"Oh, surely - "
"However, fortuitouthly my nephew Igor ith looking for a pothition, marthter. He thould do well in Ankh-Morpork. He"th rather too modern for Uberwald, that"th for thure!"
"Good lad, is he?"
"Hith heart"th in the right plathe. I know that for thertain, thur."
"Er, good. Well, get a message to him, then. We"re leaving as soon as we can."
"He will be tho exthited, thur! I"ve heard that in Ankh-Morpork bodieth jutht lie around in the thtreetth for anyone to take away!"
"It"s not quite as bad as that, Igor."
"Ithn"t it? Oh well, you can"t have everything. I"ll tell him directly." Igor lurched off in a sort of high-speed totter.
I wonder why they all walk like that, thought Vimes. They must have one leg shorter than the other. Either that or they"re not good at choosing boots.
He sat down on the steps to the house and fished out a cigar. So that was it, then. Bloody
politics again. It was always bloody politics, or bloody diplomatics. Bloody lies in smart clothing. Once you got off the streets criminals just flowed through your fingers. The King and Lady Margolotta and Vetinari... they always looked at some sort of big picture. Vimes knew he was, and always would be, a little picture man. Dee was useful, so she"d probably get, oh, a few days breaking bread or whatever it was they gave you here for being naughty. After all, all she"d destroyed was a fake, wasn"t it?
Was it?
But she"d thought she was committing a much bigger crime. That ought to mean something, in Sam Vimes"s personal gallery of little pictures.
And the Baroness was as guilty as hell. People had died. As for Wolfgang... well, some people were just built guilty. It was as simple as that. Anything they did became a crime, simply because it was them doing it.
He blew out a stream of smoke.
People like that shouldn"t be allowed to simply die their way out of things.
But... he hadn"t, had he?