Chapter 42

Chapter 422,578 wordsCompleted

On a Thursday afternoon, Baroness Rainakienė anxiously waits for the young priest Kun. Vasaris, wondering whether he will appear. She confides in Lady Sokolina that she feels she is falling in love with the priest and contemplates a brief, month‑long liaison, comparing the possible affair to a fleeting summer romance. She expresses a desire for a modest, gentle, innocent man and identifies Vasaris as fitting that ideal.

At precisely five o’clock—an hour when the local barons usually enjoy coffee—Vasaris arrives at the Rainakienė manor. He deliberately chooses the time to avoid a direct encounter with the baroness, but he is greeted warmly by her, given a cup of coffee, and allowed to smoke a cigarette while they discuss travel to the southern lands. In the salon, Vasaris meets Sokolina and three members of the Kozinski family, noting that the Kozinskis have grown distant from the baroness. After a brief half‑hour conversation, Vasaris prepares to leave.

Baroness Rainakienė, determined to extend their interaction, invites Vasaris to accompany her to the manor’s library. She explains that she wants him to have some books to read over the winter and to receive specific instructions on their use. She promises that the library will be a place where he can imagine “tamstas” (a private, imaginative space) and feel useful. Vasaris, while acknowledging the moral ambiguity of staying alone with a married woman, accepts the invitation. In the library, they arrange the books, and the baroness subtly flirts, speaking poetically about “tamsta” and the intimacy of shared reading.

When they return to the salon, the baroness impulsively leans in and kisses Vasaris. The kiss is sudden and full of genuine feeling; Vasaris experiences a flood of emotion and a wave of joy. He immediately begins to analyze the act in theological terms, recalling the concept of “osculum cum libidine” (a kiss with lustful intent). He debates whether the kiss constitutes a grave (mortal) sin, a venial sin, or merely a harmless gesture, noting that his status as a priest and her status as a married woman complicate the moral assessment. He concludes that, while the act is sinful, it is likely venial because it was not a premeditated act of lust.

The baron, overhearing the scene, erupts in French, accusing the baroness of leading the priest toward perdition. The baroness retorts that she has only spent a few pleasant hours with him and that his reaction shows his potential for love. She continues to praise Vasaris, describing him as a “modest, gentle, innocent man” and suggesting that his time with her could inspire artistic creation.

Later, Vasaris returns to his vicarage, confronting the stark contrast between the warm, romantic encounter and the cold, austere rooms of his own quarters. He reflects on the moral weight of the kiss, his unsolved feelings for the baroness, and the impossibility of reconciling his priestly vows with his newfound desire. The chapter ends with Vasaris awaiting the next Sunday service, contemplating whether to sit in the front row again in hopes of seeing the baroness, while his conscience remains tormented by the sin and longing he experienced.