Chapter 55

Chapter 552,097 wordsCompleted

Liudas Vasaris awakens early in his hotel room, feeling a lingering mix of relief at having avoided a Mass and lingering shame about his priestly duties. He reflects on his recent past in Paris, Rome, and Russia, recalling the many masses he celebrated (or avoided) over the previous years. After a brief ritual of washing and dressing, he hears a knock on the door. Assuming it is the hotel servant, he calls out “Tarnaitė!” but instead a firm, resonant voice greets him with “Laudetur Jesus Christus!” The speaker is a middle‑aged, slightly corpulent Franciscan monk, later identified as Father Severinas. He addresses Vasaris formally, confirming the room is correct, and explains that the hotel frequently hosts priests who need to hear confession, especially when they are far from their own parishes. He mentions that a brother in the seminary is seriously ill (“ligas sunkią, gal ir mirs”) and requires a confessor urgently, but the brother refuses a local priest. Father Severinas asks Vasaris to act as his confessor, emphasizing that the brother is not from the immediate area and that the request is exceptional. Vasaris, still unsettled by the monk’s intense gaze and the sudden intrusion, feels a surge of anxiety and a vague sense that the monk can read his thoughts. After a brief exchange confirming the request, Father Severinas steps back, saying he will return later for the confession, and exits the room, leaving Vasaris to contemplate the strange encounter and the looming responsibility of providing spiritual aid to a distant, sick cleric.