Yup, when you pull a plug wire on a running engine the energy has to go somewhere. When it arcs across the insulating material it turns a bit of it into carbon. This makes the path easier to follow each subsequent time. Eventually you end up burning an alternate path into the insulating material.
Safe way to isolate cylinders for diagnosis is putting a bare metal extender on the plug top and connecting the plug wire to the top of the extender. When you want to disable a cylinder you touch the head with an INSULATED handle screwdriver and bring the shaft to rest on the plug extender. Spark shorts to case ground and energy sagely dissipated. I always made plug extenders with the plug screw on top terminal with a long metric screw (head removed) threaded halfway through it. That screws easily on top of plug and plug wire fits the metric screw.
Early sparking systems (R60/2, Ural) had two grounded and pointed tabs that were gapped near the coil outputd so that if a plug wire dropped off the spark would jump from the metal terminal to the point on the grounding tab. Insulation was not so good in the '50s.

Two ground points aimed at HV terminals visible in this photo.