Thm B.3 of Nikolaus and Scholze shows that the natural inclusion $\Delta \to \Lambda_\infty$, from the simplex category to the paracycle category, is an initial functor, i.e. satisfies the hypotheses of Quillen's Theorem A. That is, they show that the category $\mathcal C = \Delta \times_{\Lambda_\infty} (\Lambda_\infty)_{/(1/n)\mathbb Z}$ is contractible for each $n \geq 1$. They do this by covering $\mathcal C$ with intervals $\mathcal C[t,t+1)$ comprising those maps $f : (1/k)\mathbb Z \to (1/n)\mathbb Z$ such that $f(\{0/k,1/k,\dots,k-1/k\}) \subseteq [t,t+1)$ and performing an induction over the lattice of subcategories generated by these ones. In order for their induction to work, they need to know that $\mathcal C[t,t+1) \cap \mathcal C[s,s+1)$ is contractible for all $t,s \in (1/n) \mathbb Z$. I agree that this intersection is contractible when nonempty. However it seems to me that this intersection is often empty. For example, it's empty when $s$ and $t$ are distinct integers.
Question: Have I misunderstood something? Is $\mathcal C[t,t+1) \cap \mathcal C[s,s+1)$ always nonempty? If I've understood correctly, is there some tweak which will allow this argument to go through?