Chapter 32

Chapter 323,639 wordsCompleted

In the days following his arrival, priest Liudas Vasaris orders a full‑scale cleaning of the Kalnynų church. He enlists Julė, Stripaitis, and a group of women to wash the altar cloths, purifiers, and corporals, then to scrub the floors, windows, and ornamented altarpiece. After a labor‑intensive hour with two buckets of water, the church glistens: the blue sky shines through the windows, gilded carvings flash, silver candlesticks and nickel candlesticks sparkle, and the once‑dust‑covered iconography appears radiant.

The senior vicar, Kun. Platūnas, arrives at the reopened mass visibly angry. Though the congregation praises the pristine interior, Platūnas berates Vasaris, accusing him of flaunting his reformist zeal and of “stealing” the church’s honor. He bitterly blames Vasaris for the “new order” and refuses to acknowledge the cleaning effort, even as he slurs his shoes across the freshly scrubbed floor and notes his own boots are still dusty.

Later, farmers Žodelis and Borvikis enter the parish yard, demanding an audience with the clergy over suspicions that the newly arrived priest Stripaitis and the cooperatives are embezzling members’ dues. Žodelis complains that the “Žagrės” council and the “Krautuvėlės” (a local wheat‑transport business) are siphoning money, while Borvikis repeats that the cooperatives’ accounts are opaque and that Stripaitis never shows the financial statements. They propose summoning a meeting of the parish board to demand transparency. Vasaris, uneasy about getting entangled in the dispute, listens but declines to intervene, fearing scandal.

The farmers suggest a covert approach: they will sneak past the market through a side door, avoid the public square, and confront the cooperatives from the rear. They also arrange for an “orator” to address the assembled crowd in the inn, accusing the priests of profiteering. The orator denounces the clergy’s “gold‑plated” altar as a cover for personal gain, claims that donations are funneled into private pockets, and calls for the removal of Stripaitis.

During the heated inn gathering, villagers, priests, and farmers drink heavily. Glasses shatter; Stripaitis brandishes a massive staff and, in a sudden outburst, strikes a farmer (Borvikis) on the shoulder. The crowd erupts into chaotic shouting, men slam tables, and a few attempt to flee. Vasaris watches, clutching a doorway, his hands trembling. The orator continues to shout about “dirty money” and “betrayed faith,” while the vicar Platūnas, hidden in the background, mutters resentfully about the “new priest’s arrogance.”

In the aftermath, the inn is left in disarray, with broken bottles, scattered chairs, and a tense silence. Vasaris retreats to the church, where the altarpiece still glitters, but he feels the weight of the vicar’s hostility and the farmers’ anger. He resolves to keep a low profile, focusing on his clerical duties while the conflict over the cooperatives and the village’s finances remains unresolved.