'You're the bothth, thur.'
'And I shall be popping back shortly with a man. Er, a gentleman who is not anxious to meet civic authority.'
'Quite, thur. Give them a pitchfork and they think they own the bloody plathe, thur.'
'But he's not a murderer or anything.'
'I'm an Igor, thur. We don't athk quethtionth.'
'Really? Why not?
'I don't know, thur. I didn't athk.'
Igor took Moist to a small door that opened into a grimy trash-filled stairwell, half flooded by the unremitting rain. Moist paused on the threshold, the water already soaking into his cheap suit. 'Just one thing, Igor...'
'Yeth, thur?'
'When I walked past the Glooper just now, there was water in it.'
'Oh, yeth, thur. Ith that a problem?'
'It was moving, Igor. Should that be happening at this time of night?'
'That? Oh, jutht thyphonic variableth, thur. It happenth all the time.'
'Oh, the old syphonics, eh? Ah, well, that's a relief - '
'Jutht give the barber-thurgeon'th knock when you return, thur.'
'What is the - '
The door closed.
Inside, Igor went back to his workbench and fired up the gas again.
Some of the little glass tubes lying beside him on a piece of green felt looked... odd, and reflected the light in disconcerting ways.
The point about Igors... the thing about Igors... Well, most people looked no further than the musty suit, lank hair, cosmetic clan scars and stitching, and the lisp. And this was probably because, apart from the lisp, this was all there was to see.
And people forgot, therefore, that most of the people who employed Igors were not conventionally sane. Ask them to build a storm attractor and a set of lightning storage jars and they would laugh at you.[5] They needed, oh, how they needed someone in possession of a fully working brain, and every Igor was guaranteed to have at least one of those. Igors were, in fact, smart, which was why they were always elsewhere when the fiery torches hit the windmill.
And they were perfectionists. Ask them to build you a device and you wouldn't get what you asked for. You'd get what you wanted.
In its web of reflections, the Glooper glooped. Water rose in a thin glass tube and dripped into a little glass bucket, which tipped on to a tiny seesaw and caused a tiny valve to open.
Owlswick Jenkins's recent abode, according to the Times, was Short Alley. There wasn't a house number because Short Alley was only big enough for one front door. The door in question was shut but hanging by one hinge. A scrap of black and yellow rope indicated, for those who hadn't spotted the clue of the door, that the place had come to the recent attention of the Watch.
The door fell off the hinge when Moist pushed at it, and landed in the stream of water that was gushing down the alley.
It wasn't much of a search, because Owlswick hadn't bothered to hide. He was in a room on the first floor, surrounded by mirrors and candles, a dreamy look on his face, peacefully painting.
He dropped the brush when he saw Moist, grabbed a tube that lay on a bench, and held it in front of his mouth, ready to swallow.
'Don't make me use this! Don't make me use this!' he warbled, his whole body trembling.
'Is it some kind of toothpaste?' said Moist. He sniffed the very lived-in air of the studio and added: 'That could help, you know.'
'This is Uba Yellow, the most poisonous paint in the world! Stand back or I will die horribly!' said the forger. 'Er, in fact the most poisonous paint is probably Agatean White, but I've run out of that, it is most vexing.' It occurred to Owlswick that he had lost the tone slightly, and he quickly raised his voice again. 'But this is pretty poisonous, all the same!'