Page 37 of I'll Find You Where the Timeline Ends

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“I don’t know.”

Chapter Ten

Hyebin forced me to see the medics, who examined each of my toes with exquisite care and poked around the inside of my mouth until they determined that the mysterious wave of nothingness hadn’t rearranged my organs. Somehow, I’d escaped with only a lock of white hair.

By the time the medics were finished with me, Hyebin had done enough research to determine that the bleach tsunami was most likely a timeline fluctuation. She marked it in her report as an Unexplained Illogical Behavior While on an Alternate Plane of Time, the catch-all phrase for Something Very Bad That We Don’t Know How to Fix.

“I’ve read through some past incident reports,” Hyebin said, fingers dancing across the scrying pool. “Similar events have been reported due to unresolved paradoxes, which started the process of timeline decay.”

“Decay?” I echoed, hugging my backpack to my chest.

“Think of the timeline like a piece of wood, and paradoxesare like hungry termites,” Hyebin said, now using both hands to pull up different files at once. “We can never eliminate paradoxes completely—time traveling is inherently paradoxical—but we try to keep the amount of paradoxes below a certain percent. Otherwise, the holes get too big and strange things start happening.”

My lock of white hair fell in front of my eyes, and I hurriedly tucked it behind my ear. “On a scale of one to ten, how panicked should I be?” I said.

“The paradox seems to be isolated for now,” Hyebin said, rather than answer my question, “but I have to do some more digging to find the cause.”

“What could cause this?” I said.

Hyebin shrugged. “People messing up their assignments, open time loops, unauthorized traveling… there’s too many possibilities.”

Unauthorized traveling?I thought back to Yejun releasing the butterflies into the sky at Namsan Seoul Tower. My hands broke out in a nervous sweat, so I jammed my fists into my pockets. Had Yejun and I caused this? Did bringing back Timeline Alpha mean destroying the current timeline while we were standing on it? On any other day, Hyebin probably could have read the terror in my eyes, but she was too preoccupied with the scrying pool to even meet my gaze.

“In case it wasn’t obvious, I’m too busy to train you today,” Hyebin said. “Go home. Text me if you spot any paradoxes.”

“Right,” I said, jumping to my feet. I’d take any excuse to leave before I sweated through my shirt and blurted out all my sins to Hyebin.

I tried to bow, but as I lowered my head, pain blared behind my eyes, my vision flashing white. It was that same timesickness headache, but so sudden and sharp that it felt like someone had taken a pickaxe behind my eyes. For a moment, I actually thought my eyeballs were going to pop out and roll across the floor of Hyebin’s office.I reached out for balance but only managed to grab a handful of potted plant before I felt hands on my shoulders.

My vision cleared just as Hyebin pushed me back into my chair.

“What’s wrong?” she said, gripping my face, her dark eyes scrutinizing me. When I couldn’t find the words to answer right away, she scowled and shook her head. “Those medics are useless.”

I swallowed, my throat suddenly dry. The pain had faded a bit, now back to a dull ache. “It feels like a timesickness headache,” I managed, though my tongue felt heavy in my mouth. “But according to my scrying pool, I don’t have any open loops.”

Hyebin pressed her lips together, then turned back to her desk. She grabbed an item too small for me to see, then slammed the drawer shut and knelt in front of me. With one hand, she took my wrist, then with the other she tore open an alcohol wipe between her teeth and swiped it across my arm. Before I could ask what she was doing, she pulled out a thin needle and poked it into my wrist.

I flinched, but Hyebin held my arm steady so I couldn’t pull away. As soon as the surprise faded, I realized my headache was just… gone. I blinked, glancing experimentally up at the light, which no longer seared my eyes. My gaze dropped to the thin needle sticking out of my arm.

“What did you do?” I said.

“Acupuncture,” she said, tossing the alcohol wipe in the trash.

I shook my head. “I’ve tried that before,” I said. “It’s never worked for me.”

“Because you’re not human,” Hyebin said. “Human acupuncturists can’t help you because your nervous system is different from theirs.”

I feel pretty human, I thought, wincing as Hyebin plucked out the needle. “You’ve had this kind of headache before?” she said, sitting in front of her scrying pool.

“It didn’t start today, if that’s what you’re asking,” I said. “I don’t think the paradox scrambled my brain or anything like that.”

She made a wordless sound of acknowledgment, her fingers dancing across the pool and her frown deepening.

“You’re right, you don’t have any open loops,” she said, glaring at her reflection in the water.

“The architects must have missed something,” I said. “I saw one of my Echoes a few days ago.”

Hyebin’s gaze snapped up. “You did?” she said, her expression grave. “Are you sure?”