Very nithe indee—”
“I didn’t ask anyone for an assistant!” said Jeremy. “Who sent you?”
“We are Igorth, thur.”
“Yes, you said! Look, I don’t—”
“No, thur. ‘We R Igorth,’ thur. The organithathion , thur.”
“What organization?”
“For plathementh , thur. You thee, thur, the thing ith…an Igor often findth himthelf between marthterth through no fault of hith own, you thee. And on the other hand—”
“—you have two thumbs…” breathed Jeremy, who had just noticed and couldn’t stop himself. “Two on each hand!”
“Oh, yeth, thur, very handy,” said Igor, not even glancing down, “on the other hand there ith no thortage of people wanting an Igor. So my aunt Igorina runth our thelect little agenthy.”
“For… lots of Igors?” said Jeremy.
“Oh, there’th a fair number of uth. We’re a big family.” Igor handed Jeremy a card.
He read:
----
W E R I GORS
A Spare Hand When Needed
T HE O LD R ATHAUS
B AD S CHÜSCHEIN
c-mail: Yethmarthter Uberwald
----
Jeremy stared at the semaphore address. His normal ignorance of anything that wasn’t to do with clocks did not apply here. He’d been quite interested in the new cross-continent semaphore system after hearing that it made quite a lot of use of clockwork mechanisms to speed up the message flow. So you could send a clacks message to hire an Igor? Well, that explained the speed, at least.
“Rathaus,” he said. “That means something like a council hall, doesn’t it?”
“Normally, thur… normally ,” said Igor reassuringly.
“Do you really have semaphore addresses in Uberwald?”
“Oh, yeth. We are ready to grathp the future with both handth, thur.”
“—And four thumbs—”
“Yeth, thur. We can grathp like anything .”
“And then you mailed yourself here?”
“Thertainly, thur. We Igors are no thtrangers to dithcomfort.”
Jeremy looked down at the paperwork he’d been handed, and a name caught his eye.
The top paper was signed. In a way, at least. There was amessage in neat capitals, as neat as printing, and a name at the end.
HE WILL BE USEFUL
LEJEAN
He remembered. “Oh, Lady LeJean is behind this? She had you sent to me?”
“That’th correct, thur.”
Feeling that Igor was expecting more of him, Jeremy made a show of reading through the rest of what turned out to be references. Some of them were written in what he could only hope was dried brown ink, one was in crayon, and several were singed around the edges. They were all fulsome. After a while, though, a certain tendency could be noted among the signatories.
“This one is signed by someone called Mad Doctor Scoop,” he said.
“Oh, he wathn’t actually named Mad, thur. It wath more like a nickname, ath it were.”
“Was he mad, then?”
“Who can thay, thur,” said Igor calmly.
“And Crazed Baron Haha? It says under Reason for Leaving that he was crushed by a burning windmill.”
“Cathe of mithtaken identity, thur.”
“Really?”
“Yeth, thur. I underthtand the mob mithtook him for Thcreaming Doctor Berthserk, thur.”
“Oh. Ah, yes.” Jeremy glanced down. “Who you also worked for, I see.”
“Yeth, thur.”
“And who died of blood poisoning?”
“Yeth, thur. Cauthed by a dirty pitchfork.”
“And…Nipsie the Impaler?”
“Er…would you believe he ran a kebab thhop, thur?”
“Did he?”
“Not conventionally tho, thur.”
“You mean he was mad, too?”
“Ah. Well, he did have hith little wayth, I mutht admit, but an Igor never patheth judgment on hith marthter or mithtreth, thur. That ith the Code of the Igorth, thur,” he added patiently. “It would be a funny old world if we were all alike, thur.”
Jeremy was completely baffled as to his next move. He’d never been very good at talking to people, and this, apart from Lady LeJean and a wrangle with Mr. Soak over an unwanted cheese, was the longest conversation he’d had for a year. Perhaps it was because it was hard to
Dorothy Salisbury Davis, Jerome Ross