Chapter 54

Chapter 541,700 wordsCompleted

Liudas Vasaris arrives at Professor Antanas Meškėnas’s house in the evening. The host greets him enthusiastically, and Representative Stripaitis, whom Liudas has just met, embraces him with exaggerated affection, repeatedly calling him “brother” and shoving the professor aside. Stripaitis launches into a noisy, satirical tirade about politics, the clergy’s role, and foreign powers, while the lawyer Indrulis interjects with jokes about the Vatican and Moscow. Meškėnas eventually intervenes, turning the heated exchange into a mock‑sermon. The guests sit around a table; the host keeps refilling glasses, and the atmosphere becomes boisterous as Stripaitis drinks heavily, Indrulis “keeps company,” and Vasaris also partakes. Vasaris praises Meškėnas, recalling a former professor who taught both philosophy and wine‑ology, and the conversation turns to his own clerical career. When asked how long he has been a priest, Vasaris answers twelve years, lamenting the swift passage of his youth. He later checks the clock, notes it is past midnight, and wanders to another room, where Meškėnas confronts him, asking if he has had any drink after twelve. Vasaris says no; Meškėnas, relieved, mentions he has not yet finished his zelter glass and needs to celebrate a forthcoming Gregorian liturgy in two days. He asks Vasaris to substitute for him at the next service, invoking a possible “casus conscientiae.” Vasaris refuses, insisting he cannot comply, prompting Meškėnas to lament the strengthening of Western European principles and to accept Vasaris’s refusal. Vasaris departs, and Indrulis escorts him to the stairs. During their walk, Indrulis offers Vasaris a room in “Rūtoje” and describes a prospective stay. He then brings up a wealthy American woman—an American lady of high standing—detailing her appearance and suggesting a potential connection, which Vasaris receives with cynicism and discomfort. The chapter ends with Vasaris reflecting on these proposals, his inability to accept Meškėnas’s request, and the growing tension between his priestly duties and personal entanglements.