Chapter 77

Chapter 772,617 wordsCompleted

At about six in the morning Vasaris awakens from a restless sleep filled with chaotic memories of the night. In a fleeting vision he sees a pale‑faced, black‑clad lady—Liucija—enter his room, approach his bed, and then vanish through a wall. Startled, he hears a series of forceful knocks on his door. Opening it, he finds a frightened Adelė, who informs him that “the lady” has died. Vasaris immediately asks whether a doctor has been summoned and whether the husband, Mr. Glaudžius, who is away in Klaipėda, has been notified. Adelė confirms that everything has been arranged.

Vasaris rushes to the Glaudžius apartment, where he meets the same doctor who had attended Vytukas’s death. The doctor, after a brief examination, declares that Liucija died of a heart disease, noting that she had recently suffered severe moral and physical distress. Vasaris, however, suspects a possible suicide and presses the doctor for confirmation; the doctor maintains that the death was natural, though he concedes that such a heart failure could have been precipitated by extreme suffering.

Vasaris then enters Liucija’s bedroom and finds her lying on a couch, dressed in the same black frock, with white stockings, shining shoes, earrings, and a markedly pale, grotesquely distorted face. He touches her cold hand, recoils, and again questions the doctor about the nature of the death. The doctor repeats that it was a natural cardiac failure, but Vasaris remains uneasy, considering that only a desperate person might die in such a manner.

Back in the dining room, Vasaris interrogates Adelė about how the body was discovered. Adelė recounts that he first noticed the flickering electric light in Liucija’s room, entered cautiously, and found the lady dead on a couch, her body twisted unnaturally, one hand almost touching the floor. After calling for help, the servants gathered the broken glass, cleared the spilled wine, and attempted to summon the doctor, whose phone was initially out of order.

Later, Vasaris goes to the post office, writes a telegram, and sends it to Kanauninkas Kimša, the local kanauninkas, informing him of the death. Returning home, he spots an envelope containing a letter written by Liucija herself, addressed to his friend Liudas. The letter is a chilling suicide note: Liucija explains that she intends to end her life with a rapid‑acting poison, describes her feelings of betrayal, urges Liudas not to be sentimental, and asks that his memory of her be untainted. She also references a “God” and a plea for a swift end, predicting that he will receive the letter only after her death.

Vasaris reads the letter repeatedly, the words trembling in his mind, and reflects on the possibility that the “natural” heart failure was in fact suicide. He is haunted by the vivid description of Liucija’s corpse surrounded by candles, wax, and darkened curtains, and by the eerie image of her face half‑pressed into a veil of white shroud.

The chapter culminates with the funeral procession: Liucija’s body is laid in a coffin surrounded by numerous candles; the mourners include the kanauninkas Kimša, who arrives solemnly, and other local townsfolk. During the rites, Vasaris observes the ritualistic prayers, the coldness of Liucija’s appearance, and the palpable grief of the community. After the service, Vasaris returns to the Glaudžius house, still shaken, and the narrative ends with him contemplating the haunting letter and the finality of Liucija’s death.