Chapter 29

Chapter 292,141 wordsCompleted

Liudas Vasaris travels to the parish of Kalnynų in a carriage. At the gate he is met by the newly appointed vicar, Kun. Platūnas, who greets him with obvious hostility and suspicion, questioning Vasaris’s presence and role. Platūnas informs Vasaris that the vicarage is only half‑finished: the roof leaks, windows are broken, plaster is unfinished, and the altar and liturgical furnishings are in disrepair. Vasaris is shown the cramped, dusty rooms where he will share space with his father and his brother, who have come to help him settle. The three of them begin to clear cobwebs, move crates of old vestments, and set up makeshift furniture. Vasaris reflects on his new priestly duties—preparing for daily Mass, overseeing the neglected altar, and caring for the parishioners—while noting the poor state of the church’s finances; the parish owes money for recent repairs, and the vicarage lacks funds for basic supplies. Throughout the day, Vasaris experiences a simmering tension with Julė, a local woman (possibly a relative or a parishioner) who appears in the vicarage corridor, exchanging terse words about his devotion and the financial strain his presence brings. The chapter ends with Vasaris sitting alone in his modest room, contemplating the hardships ahead, the cold reception from Platūnas, and the uncertain future of his ministry in Kalnynų.