Chapter 48

Chapter 483,274 wordsCompleted

At the beginning of June the baroness Rainakienė arrives at the manor. The first messenger is Julė, who brings the news while serving lunch and jokes that Rainakienė and her sister Sokolina have already settled in, but the priest is still absent. Julë recounts various gossip about Rainakienė’s husband being in Germany for stomach treatment and mentions a recent trip to Iciką for salt, where a carriage driver nearly lost his horses.

Prompted by the house‑wife’s remark that the young poet‑priest of Kalnynų sometimes frequents the library, the baroness decides to arrange a meeting with priest Liudas Vasaris. She drafts a short note addressed to “dear priest Liudas” asking to see him as soon as possible, and gives it to her maid to deliver to Vasaris’s apartment. When the maid arrives, Vasaris is not home, so Julė begins cleaning the priest’s rooms. The maid hands the letter to Julė, who inspects it and immediately senses a strange, witch‑like odor. She angrily tosses the note onto the table, feeling a sharp pain in her heart as if the paper were a living ember that refuses to be released. She hides the note under a rat‑skin pouch and, hearing the priest’s steps outside, quickly places the hidden letter away.

Meanwhile, Vasaris, having spent the night in the “labirintas”, decides to tidy himself up. He shaves, trims his hair, orders new clothing, and re‑arranges his modest furnishings – adding a sofa, a round table, a bookshelf, curtains and a couple of pictures to his first room. He feels a renewed spring‑like vigor and wonders whether a great feast or an important guest is imminent.

Walking through the manor grounds, Vasaris spots two riders on a hill, recognises them as the baroness and her sister, and approaches them. The baroness greets him coldly, commenting that she has been waiting for his visit for two days while Sokolina has done nothing. She hints that the letter she sent was not a love letter but “something else”, and Vasaris, remembering that the maid had hidden a suspicious note, becomes wary. Their brief exchange ends with the baroness turning back toward the manor, leaving Vasaris uncertain about her intentions and the true content of the letter.