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Chapter 247 - Bifurcation

Siobhan

Month 9, Day 12, Sunday 7:00 a.m.

Siobhan woke to a mind—a self—tearing itself in two. 

Most of her remembered coming to wait for Thaddeus, hoping to discuss the situation with the emergency shelters that had become obvious to her the day before, and then ending up waiting a very long time indeed. But a piece of her Will, more separate from the rest than any part of her had ever been, remembered differently. 

This other version of events was dream-like and incoherent, and it hurt in a way the less horrifying version of events didn’t. That made her believe it might be real. The feel of the shards of her shattered black sapphire Conduit digging into her side under her clothes made her sure. She tried to remember what had happened in that other version, but her knees gave out under her as a terrible spike of pain seemed to spike through the spot between her eyebrows. It was as if someone had hammered a construction nail right through her skull in a single blow.

Just like I did to Thaddeus’s ear, maybe,’ she thought semi-coherently as he grabbed her around the waist and supported the weight of her body. 

He was shaking her, saying her name in a tone full of worry, but her eyes couldn’t even focus on his face. It felt like something critical within her had frayed and was coming apart at the seams, like her heart would rip and crawl its way out of her chest. She had never realized how deeply horrifying it would be to have lost her grip on reality. Because that was what it was. She did not know what was real. She didn’t feel real. 

Her Will may be able to split into two threads, but it could not work against itself. It was the same reason she hadn’t been able to scry herself while simultaneously empowering her divination-diverting ward.

To stop this terrible wrongness, she pressed the part that knew something horrible into a ball, all facing inward, tiny and quiet, and shoved it to the back of her mind. The pain and confusion eased immediately, but did not disappear.

“I deeply apologize, Siobhan.” Thaddeus’s voice cracked. “I attacked on instinct when you surprised me.” He rubbed his face wearily. “This has been an incredibly trying day, and I am on edge. But that is no excuse.”

Siobhan looked around desperately, though she didn’t know what she was looking for. Something to explain what had happened, maybe. Some hint that the world wasn’t real, perhaps.

But her survival instincts had been honed for so long that they were ingrained in her. ‘When weak, show strength,’ she heard in an echo of Grandfather’s voice. She nodded, and in a hoarse voice, said, “I bear at least half the blame. I cannot believe I thought giving a bit of a scare to Thaddeus Lacer was a good idea. Though whatever you cast, I am surprised you managed to take me down before I could react.” She gave a tight smile and sat up. “This is a bit embarrassing.” 

She braced herself and, with Thaddeus’s, help, managed to stand upright, one hand to her temple. 

“I promise not to tell anyone,” he said, though his smile seemed mocking.

Siobhan almost punched him in the face, but managed to hold back, since there was a reasonable chance that such impulsiveness would get her killed.

“Are you alright?” Thaddeus asked. 

“I am fine, thank you. I suppose I am lucky that you did not cast something more lethal,” she said, trying for a smile as the other part of her quaked in fear of this man who was acting so concerned for her. She pressed it down further. 

“I was busy with our response to today’s Aberrant. I assumed neither of you would wait for me,” Thaddeus said. 

Siobhan blinked. Surely, this had happened already? After a moment, she said, “Kiernan has left already. I waited because I wanted to talk to you about something different.” For some reason, her heart began to race at the words. 

This is a test,’ she realized. ‘If I think of it like that, everything makes sense. And if that’s true, then I am in terrible danger.’ Perversely, that knowledge calmed her. She pushed back her shoulder, lifted her chin, and smiled calmly despite the spike of phantom pain that was now stabbing through her left eye. She waved toward the street. “Walk with me?” She wanted desperately to avoid going into the tunnels. 

Thaddeus nodded easily, clasping his hands behind his back like a scholar. 

Instead of trying to come up with a lie, Siobhan called upon her false memories, even though a large part of her instinctively wanted to ignore them. What if Thaddeus knew what he had planted and wanted to ensure it had taken root properly?

A distant bell tolled the hour, and the sun would soon begin to rise, though its face would be obscured by the towering white cliffs surrounding the city for another hour or two. “I cannot believe I was practicing in a fugue that whole time. It is no wonder that my head is throbbing now,” she said, watching him carefully with her peripheral vision. 

Thaddeus frowned slightly. “A hazard of the occupation. A strong Will requires great focus, which sometimes has downsides. Sebastien often forgets to eat, and when I was young, I often became so engrossed in study or some small project that I would put off going to sleep for an hour, and then suddenly find it was dawn.” 

Siobhan couldn’t play along with this casual conversation. She had to move things along and end them quickly. “I wanted to speak to you about the emergency shelters.” 

“What about them?”

“Obviously, there are too few to house Gilbratha’s growing population. I think the Red Guard must be concerned, but who will build more? Is that the responsibility of the Thirteen Crowns?” 

Thaddeus showed no outward signs of relief that the topic was only indirectly related to Aberrants, this time. “The Red Guard is aware of this issue, but funding for these projects is supposed to come from the rulers of whatever area the emergency fortifications are built in. In this case, yes, the Thirteen Crowns. The High Crown has been dragging his feet, either because he does not want to pay, or because he still hopes to leverage new shelters against the Red Guard politically, in exchange for favors and concessions. Do not worry. We might not technically have any authority to force action, but in practice, few manage to hold out against pressure from the Red Guard for long. Three new shelters should go into production by this time next year, with the capacity to hold fifty thousand each.” 

That would be enough to keep up with Gilbratha’s growth for a while, Siobhan guessed. “And at least two of them will be built in the Mires?” she asked, arching one eyebrow. 

Thaddeus chuckled. “That, I cannot say. But if my input is allowed, I will press for that. Are you satisfied?”

“I am never satisfied, but I suppose that will have to do.” 

“Let us discuss our joint project, then. Soon, it will be time to start transcribing. I wonder… Perhaps some of the information should be left out of that transcription. More dangerous applications of magic that you would not trust just anyone with, for instance.” He gave her a subtle, sidelong look.

Siobhan blinked. Thaddeus was suggesting that they collaborate to hide some of the contents of Myrddin’s journals. Or rather, to keep that information exclusive to themselves—and the Red Guard. Obviously, giving such powerful information to people who had treated her as an enemy, and who would still want to control her in the future, was sub-optimal. With the way the books worked, obscuring view from those who weren’t right next to her while she held the Will-based key in mind, it might be possible. “You did not take any vows that would interfere with that?” she asked. 

It was a small test of her own, but again, Thaddeus didn’t outwardly react. He shook his head. “The wording was much too loose to bind me to anything, and they did not even think to do an intent-aligning ritual before the binding magic.” 

Siobhan smirked. “Intent-aligning rituals? Such things are considered blood magic, are they not? At least, when not performed by a member of the Thirteen Crowns.” 

Thaddeus shot her a look, but didn’t respond. 

“I agree to your proposal,” she said, even though the thought of being trapped in a small room with Thaddeus made her fingers clench. It was what she would have done if things were normal. A hopeless, sardonic thought bloomed from the part of her mind that was hiding and trying not to be noticed. ‘I might not see the time where I have to follow through on that promise.’ 

The city had woken up around them, and when Thaddeus yawned, Siobhan bought him a black coffee from a cafe just warming up for the morning, then left while he was staring absent-mindedly into its steaming darkness. She looked over her shoulder with a smile.

He was watching her leave over the rim of the cheap cup. He smiled back, as if nothing were wrong.

Siobhan didn’t get far—barely out of his sight—before she stumbled with dizziness. She reached up to touch wetness on her upper lip and pulled away fingers smeared with blood. The edges of her vision were beginning to spark and waver. ‘Will-strain.’ She pressed her lips together, but a muffled sob burst out anyway, splattering more blood from her nose. ‘It’s getting worse, and I don’t know what to do.’ 

She moved into a narrow alley, out of sight of the morning commuters. Obviously, she needed to resolve the dissonance, but even if she wanted to simply accept the modifications—the heinous violation of her being—she didn't know how to stop knowing the truth. The other part of her could not let it go, could not un-know it. “Is this it, then? All I have done, to end like this?” she whispered, tasting iron and salt. 

“No,” she whispered, and then again, louder. “No.” 

She took less than a minute to plan out her next actions, even though by now the quintessence of quicksilver had worn off, and such hasty consideration was sure to miss something. Her mind had an expiration date, and every second spent like this brought it closer. When she knew what to do, she took the main part of her Will, the part that had been mutilated, and rolled it into an inward-facing ball, too, so that less of it could interact with the other. 

It was only a visualization method, but it helped somewhat. 

Thinking as little as possible, and contemplating the last several hours not at all, she walked like a puppeteered corpse through the streets, moving to complete the simple steps of the plan she set for herself earlier. She would prepare a few potions to help her recover and force her to sleep, and would get out of the city while she healed. Both to be as far away from danger as possible, and also because, in the case of a break event, she hoped to put as few innocents in danger as possible. 

Siobhan mentally pulled the parts of her Will apart from each other. They didn’t want to go. Some kind of magnetism seemed to keep them together, but every bit of distance she managed seemed to ease the severity of the still-accruing damage, so she kept pulling. It also gave her something to focus on other than her mis-matched memories. 

The world changed.

Siobhan jerked in surprise, looking around with confusion and sudden fear. It was as if she had blinked and time moved forward without her. The light, the noise, even her body was different. She looked at her hands—pale, thin-fingered, and larger than the hands of the body she had just been wearing. She was in a different part of the city, and not anywhere she had originally planned to go. 

Sebastien—yes, Sebastien, she confirmed—had a sudden moment of panic that Thaddeus had found her again and this time did a better job. Her breath rasped in and out roughly, but couldn’t keep up with the rapid beating of her heart. Absently, she wiped away more blood from her nose. When someone walking through the crowd suddenly appeared right in front of her, she realized that she was missing some vision in her right eye, a blank area that was not dark, but simply empty, as if her brain no longer recognized it.

“Sebastien!” a familiar voice called. 

It took her a moment to realize, and then another moment to find the source. 

Damien, Ana, and Nat were standing on the sidewalk across the street from her, staring at Sebastien as traffic passed between them. 

After a moment to think, she recognized her location, a street a kilometer or so north of Waterside Market. ‘Why am I here?’ she wondered. She had planned to move south after getting what she needed. ‘Was I heading back toward the University for some reason?’ There were faint stirrings of memory, but as she tried to dig into them, someone bumped into her shoulder, and she fell. 

“Sebastien!” Damien cried out. He rushed across the street and helped her back to her feet. 

“I have Will-strain,” she said in a low, hoarse voice. “It’s getting worse, and I need to get out of the city. I’m worried…” She swallowed, noting absently how dry her mouth and throat were. “I’m worried about a break event.” 

Damien sucked in a sharp breath, and his grip on her arm grew almost painful for a moment. 

Wait, is it possible for my Will to break when I’m not even actively casting anything?’ It was a sign of how muddled she was that she hadn’t realized this earlier. “Maybe not a break event,” she reassured Damien. ‘But that probably doesn’t preclude the chance of death by massive brain hemorrhage.’ She was already seeing strange movement and hints of silhouettes that didn’t exist out of her peripheral vision and the part of her right eye’s vision that had gone dead. 

“Carriage, I need a carriage here!” Damien screamed, waving his arm toward the street. 

One stopped, but the driver eyed Sebastien uncomfortably. 

“Is that Will-strain?” someone in the crowd asked. 

Someone else said, “I heard when a thaumaturge is about to break, they bleed out of all their orifices. Look at him, he can’t even keep his eyes straight in his head.” 

Soon after, there was a noticeable bubble of cleared space around Sebastien and Damien, and the carriage moved on.

Ana elbowed her way through the crowd, dragging Nat by the hand behind her. 

“I need a carriage here!” Damien screamed again, even more frantically. “Fifty gold for the first one that stops!” 

Sebastien swayed, and the ground rose up to meet her.

With a grunt of effort, Damien dragged her upright again, and suddenly there was a carriage stopped in front of them. 

An older woman with round cheeks and sharp eyebrows threw open the door. “Sebastien Siverling?” she asked, looking him up and down. “Get in, get in!”

Author Note 3/6/25: We are opening up the Typo Hunting Team again for the latest book! You can read the complete Book 5 (to Chapter 252) and get an extra reward of your choice in exchange for helping me find lingering errors before publication. Spots are limited, and they go fast, so submit your application before Wednesday the 12th if you would like to join.

Latest chapter discussion on Azalea's Arcane Alcove: https://alcove.azaleaellis.com/t/chapter-247-discussion/630/7

Comments

:)

ShadyTundra

Would be nice if this was a prelude for another arc. I hope it won't end with her permanently damaged or deranged, otherwise this could get boring quickly.

Luboš Hemala

I think the woman in the Carriage is either someone from the Verdant Stag or someone from the Undreaming Order.

Jonathan Sayres

wait, tlt is really popular with the kinds of nerds who read webfic ime. the Siobhan - Harrow connection is an interesting insight.

PR4v1 Samaratunga

I doubt many will get this reference, but this reminds me of what Harrowhark did to save Gideon at the end of Gideon the Ninth. She isolated the part of her brain responsible in order to prevent Gideon's soul from degrading. I wonder if something kind of similar is happening here - maybe Siobhan knew she was fucked and walled off her mind, including her own plans, then changed to Sebastian so that her friends could take care of her.

Simca

I'm theory crafting now that Damien is going to mention his report at some point and it is going to cause her memories to snap back to her

Phsteven

Bru she lobotomized herself

Don’t Censor Hentai

I wonder if this true split in wills causes her to be even more like a Brillig, with their increased power and potential for insanity

Sarah

My guess is a temporary multiple personality thing not a bodily split. I hope we will know next chapter /soon

Pete

The chapter is called Bifurcation soooo

Alex

koalababies all up the avenue

Angela Kimova

I hope they didn't split, half the pleasure of this story is the fact that one person is living 2 lives. I hope this doesn't change.

Captain Lookard

She braced herself and, with Thaddeus’s, help, managed to stand upright, one hand to her temple. -> She braced herself, and, with Thaddeus’s help, managed to stand upright, one hand to her temple.

Florian

These chapters have been stressful. I have to get through them in short bursts. Please find a way to heal!

Alexander Dupree

She had never realized how deeply horrifying it would be to have lost her grip on reality. -> ... it would have been to have lost ... or ... Would be to lose ...

Florian

Seb, buddy, pal. You can't just shout you're going to have a break event. That's like shouting you're having a baby! Expect you did have a baby, and the baby is you. You're your own baby. But less silly, S(eb?) just put and declared "I'm having a break event". S is just so funny to me. Putting her in a bottle and shaking her to see what she does

Julian Bello

IM HAVING A BREAK EVENT

Darcyspride

Indeed, I can see the implications and there isn't enough evidence to rule it out yet either. From a slightly meta standpoint, I feel that keeping the reader clear on whose PoV we are in and what their memories are could become very confusing and unwieldy if they have split. Given the world and the magic already have a lot going on it seems unnecessary to add to that. I think a chain reaction has started in her mind/memories that is causing more damage and potentially this book ends with Sebastian being cared for in the mental hospital while she has an internal struggle to repair her memories / mind

Nytram12

If only Azalea could split her will so we could get double the chapters. These cliffs are killing me! I wonder if she's how split in two in terms of two (well, three) consciousnesses in one body or two separate people entirely. What I can also see is that the Sebastien part, the "small" will which knew the truth and likely the part of her will which maintained the shadow familiar spell constantly, took over and subconsciously took Siobhan to her friends when she would've gone off alone otherwise.

Larc

You might be right, but it wasn’t posed as if S was passing out or fading into a blur. She forced two parts of her mind apart, and suddenly the world broke. Plus the title. I think it’s heavily implied.

James Barclay

Unless I've missed something I don't think there is enough here to conclusively say they've split into two people/bodies. To me it read as if she had lost time and switched bodies and probably outfits on autopilot

Nytram12

Yeah, this is the first thought I had. The chapter's title also strongly hints at this.

Simca

I wonder if this experience would allow S. to sub divide her will even more in the future? A third or even fourth split, in which she can get them all with current levels of capacity and simultaneous fine control, will make her exponentially more powerful even with her low level capacity. Imagine how her fight with Thaddeus couldn't gone if she could have cast her shadow familiar, the dazzler and a whole other spell or two over and above that

Emma Mass

I wonder if any potential difference in their memories post split will be limited to the memory wiped memories or if what memories each version has might be specific to their form I.e Sebastian can only mostly recall things that they did while in that body while Siobhan can only mostly recall things they did in their body.

Patrick van Ballegooyen

The sheer number of cliffhangers lately have been painful… love the chapter, but I need more

slash34365

I wonder if Thaddeus is going to think this is retaliation for his attack on the raven queen

Damian Karis

I was going to say that Siobhan remembering the events leading up to the memory wipe is a boring cop-out, but this is great. I hope Sebastian is the half that’s forgotten, because we’ll still get the moment with Damien. Considering they didn’t split apart right next to one another, and Sebastian is presumably wearing his clothes, S just forcefully changed local reality. Like what happens in a break event, but this time she broke into two whole people. I hope the two halves talk to each other through the dream spell. I suspect they’ll only become whole again by physically walking into the spirit realm.

James Barclay

This may be way off base, but does anyone think it is possible that by Siobhan separating/dividing her will to such a great degree she has inadvertently caused it to split apart entirely, resulting in like two independent wills/consciousnesses. One with the fake and one with the real memories and that the reason she blacked out was because the other consciousnesses temporarily took over?

Patrick van Ballegooyen

Poor S! Did she fully change into Sebastien? Did her clothes change? I wonder if the entity inside her had a hand in that. Crazy that changing her memory was enough to fully destroy her brain like this and cause will-strain. Damien is going to absolutely panic. The love of his life is in danger!

Silvia Wakefield

"It This other version" should be "It - this other version"

Milan Seyed Mahmoud

I found a lot of weird issues that I think somehow came from turning on Track Changes when editing recently. I thought I turned it off before updating the chapter, but there are artifacts of things I fixed. I just reuploaded the chapter from scratch to hopefully get rid of errors that don't actually exist in the current version.

Azalea Ellis

I knew such petty tricks would not be effective on Siobhan her mine is too strong.

Jonathan Sayres

"She took less than a minute to plan out her next actions, even though by now the quintessence of quicksilver had worn off, and such hasty consideration was sure to miss something, and by now the quintessence of quicksilver had worn off" Repetition there "contemplating the last several hours not at all" -> not at all contemplating [...] ?

Adspartan

Oh shit here we go !

Adspartan


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