Lembouruine had not given her gifts. It had loaned them. And now the interest was due.
The name came to her in a dream— Lembouruine —a single, velvet-dark word that tasted of moss and old starlight. Mandy woke with it pressing against her teeth, and by dawn, she had written it across the lid of her grandmother’s oak sewing box in silver ink.
It pushed through the ceiling into the upstairs apartment (vacant, mercifully). It wrapped around her showerhead and blossomed there—small, star-shaped flowers that bled a syrup she could not stop licking from her fingers. The syrup tasted like every sad thing she had ever swallowed and every kindness she had failed to give.
She should have put it back. Closed the box. Called a therapist. Lembouruine Mandy
She took a scalpel from her work bag. Sterile. Number 10 blade.
The vine did not resist as she cut. It bled the same syrup. And as each tendril fell, Mandy felt herself growing lighter, emptier, cleaner —until she was nothing but a girl sitting in a ruined kitchen, holding a dead seed in her palm, with no memory of why she was crying.
The oak box was gone. The skull, the velvet, the silver ink—all of it. Lembouruine had not given her gifts
Instead, she planted the seed in a pot of surgical-grade potting mix on her kitchen windowsill.
She woke one night with roots sewn through her calves, fine as surgical thread, anchoring her to the floor. The vine had begun whispering her real name—not Mandy, but the one her grandmother used to hum in the bath, the name that meant last daughter of a line that forgot how to kneel to the wood .
By the second month, Mandy understood the debt. The name came to her in a dream—
Mandy touched it. The seed warmed. A whisper unspooled in her ear, not in words but in impressions : a hound with eyes like lanterns, a bell tolling in a root-tangled church, a promise written in sap and marrow. Lembouruine meant the debt of growing things .
Three days later, a vine the color of bruised plums curled through her dish drainer. By the end of the week, it had spelled her name in cursive across the wall— Mandy —each letter a loop of thorn and petal. Her cat, Soot, refused to enter the kitchen. Her neighbor, Mr. Hartley, reported seeing “a woman made of leaves” watching from her fire escape at 3 a.m.