Reputation
Billy's sister, the smartest person in most rooms. Designed the probability trackers. Confirmed Winchester's sidewalks are genuine probability manifestations.
Private Truth
She's been tracking patterns for years. The patterns are starting to track back.
Bailey Brownbag
Billy's sister, the Resistance's resident probability researcher, and the smartest person in most rooms she walks into. Bailey Brownbag wears a bag, because that's what Brownbags do, but hers adapts to context: in Winchester, it was a fitted paper bag shaped into a structured cloth hat, because Bailey believes in blending in while standing out. She designed the probability trackers, monitors La Fiesta's baseline readings, and confirmed that Winchester's unauthorized sidewalks are genuine probability manifestations, the densest natural field she'd ever measured until Norah Finch walked through the Open House. Bailey is Billy's right hand, his strategic brain, and the person most likely to explain why everything you think you know about probability in Fanhattan is slightly wrong. She's been tracking patterns for years. The patterns are starting to track back.
Connections
Beliefs
Appears In
The Gardener's Ledger
Nate Fontaine inherits his grandfather's ledger of Winchester secrets. Sal reveals Cecil was a Brownbag intelligence asset. Three factions move for the book, and two Syndicate operatives arrive at Touchdown Terry's with the bat already gone and the camera already dark.
The Last Sidewalk
Unauthorized sidewalks appear overnight in Winchester, all leading toward Morrow's Manor. Bailey confirms they are probability manifestations, and the Syndicate piggybacks by embedding washing marks in the concrete.
The One That Wouldn't Break
Papi builds an unbreakable piñata in Casa de Boom. Something inside it is waking up—and it knows his real name.
The Open House
Winchester's Open House is co-opted by the Syndicate's sensors. Norah Finch reads far above baseline and can see the threads. The Syndicate texts "Found." Billy intercepts and moves to protect her. The journal writes: "She can hear me."