One solution
In the Sprawling Places project, I combine a tree structure into a slowly developing whole that expands beyond that structure. The hypertext is divided into regions some of which are related in a tree while others form a more general net that lacks any overall structure. Within each region the links are what Mark Bernstein calls a "tangle" that seldom follows any obvious pattern. (See Bernstein 1998.)
The difficulty for such maneuvers is the demand that they put on the reader's attention.
It is much easier to follow a sequence such as the last nine nodes than to grasp the overall argument even of this short essay, even though the argument is not too elaborate, and I have provided a deliberate oversupply of navigational devices.
The large hypertext project contains no forced structures such as the sequence you have just followed, which is a Bernstein "cycle." (Lacking conditional links I implemented this cycle as a linear sequence with a repeated node, and avoided cross links that would take the reader outside the cycle.)