Her power does vary in effectiveness depending on how closely she has verified the thing she says (e.g. if at age four she said “My daddy is dead”, this would ring true, but not as true as “I’m four”, because she believes the first thing secondhand and knows the second thing firsthand). And it’s not actually impossible to doubt her even at her maximum truthiness. She conveys that she isn’t lying (and isn’t a hallucination or otherwise basically untrustworthy), but she doesn’t come off as an Omega-creature who is absolutely beyond the possibility of being mistaken.
Her power does vary in effectiveness depending on how closely she has verified the thing she says (e.g. if at age four she said “My daddy is dead”, this would ring true, but not as true as “I’m four”, because she believes the first thing secondhand and knows the second thing firsthand). And it’s not actually impossible to doubt her even at her maximum truthiness. She conveys that she isn’t lying (and isn’t a hallucination or otherwise basically untrustworthy), but she doesn’t come off as an Omega-creature who is absolutely beyond the possibility of being mistaken.
We just saw this demonstrated, actually, in Chapter 11. Jasper is able to guess that Elspeth took the wrong meaning from Cody’s story.