At the same time that Jaron was charging after the cutpurse who had unexpectedly interrupted their exchange, Avari also started chasing after him, shaking her fist at the thief furiously. How dare he get in the way like this? The Konti had been looking forward to giving the tall, mercenary swordsman a fortune-telling reading that would scare him out of his shoes and make him weep like a child. What's more, she had been looking even more forward to getting closer to Jaron while she read his "fortune," reaching out for his pouch while the man was distracted, and lifting his money pouch from his pocket for good this time. All Avari needed was a chance, a second's worth of opportunity, and she would grab the pouch, dump the journal on the ground, and run for dear life.
And now this new thief had ruined her plan! The nerve!
Giving no thought to whatever Jaron was shouting at her about rewards, Avari swore at the fleeing cutpurse as she went after him. "You son of a slaver! That was my money, you fool!"
Aghast at her slip, Avari stopped dead in her tracks and glanced hastily at Jaron, who had just swerved around the corner in hot pursuit of the cutpurse. "I mean, that was his money! You ought to give it back!" she shouted, attempting to amend her slip, and resumed running after the cutpurse.
Turning the corner herself, she found herself only a few steps behind Jaron as they both pelted down the narrow alleyway that the cutpurse had chosen. She held tight to her wide-brimmed hat and pulled her cloak tightly around her as she ran, trying to keep both from flapping free and slowing her down. The cutpurse glanced briefly back at them, looking a little wide-eyed that he was facing two pursuers instead of just the man he had robbed, and abruptly dove into an even smaller, more twisty alleyway. Avari's and Jaron's footsteps pounded on the ancient cobbles of the Old Quarter as they nearly piled into each other while changing course to chase after the elusive cutpurse.
We're never going to catch this fellow as long as he doesn't slow down, Avari realized. The cutpurse evidently knew the streets and alleys of the city at least as well as she did, if not better, and only he knew where he was going and when he was going to turn, hide, or continue running. As long as he was able to evade them by ducking into different alleys and taking ever more circuitous routes to trip them up and confuse them, the cutpurse would be able to outrun them with little trouble unless he ran into a wall or perhaps another person who was quick with a knife and interested in a money pouch.
Avari wasn't about to count on stray obstacles or unknown strangers to help her catch this cutpurse, though, not when she had two things strapped to her waist that she knew could slow him down. She had never shown much aptitude with the whalebone suvai so beloved of her Konti sisters, let alone a sword, but she had rather enjoyed learning the art of using throwing weapons at the Suvai Pavilion. Now, in a single fluid motion, she let go of her cloak with her right hand, drew the throwing dagger sheathed at her hip, and measured the distance between her and the cutpurse. He was perhaps ten feet away, no more. Squinting closely, she aimed the dagger to strike his right leg and threw.
The dagger flew through the air as straight and quick as an arrow. Unfortunately, it flew about three feet above the cutpurse's head, missing him entirely and clattering against the wall. Avari wanted to weep or curse at her awful aim. Panting a little with exertion and frustration, she reached for her second dagger to make another throw.
Before she had drawn the blade, however, the first dagger tumbled down from where it had struck the wall and fell, end over end, jolting against small bumps and cracks in the wall, squarely on top of the cutpurse's unprotected head. The dagger landed hilt first, so the man was only momentarily stunned rather than cut or slashed, but the surprise of being struck from above caught the cutpurse completely unawares. Without even realizing it, he decelerated and looked around in bewilderment.
Aha! Avari mentally crowed in triumph. Here was her chance! Now that the man wasn't moving quite so fast, it would be much easier to hit him in a way that actually hurt.
She took aim with her second dagger and flung it forward. It grazed the cutpurse's right shoulder, instead of his leg, but a most satisfactory line of blood slowly streamed down his grimy shirt from the small wound. Crying out briefly in pain, the cutpurse glared at her and tried desperately to turn and run. In the next instant, though, the swordsman had caught up to the man, leaping at him before he could get away. It looked as though it would be a very bad day for the would-be cutpurse.