"The Unbearable Lightness Of Being" By Milan Kundera
119
After making one last call from his final job of the day and starting back to the office at
four to hand in his signed order slips, he was stopped in the center of Prague by a
woman he failed to recognize. Wherever have you disappeared to? I haven't seen you
in ages!
Tomas racked his brains to place her. Had she been one of his patients? She was
behaving like an intimate friend. He tried to answer in a manner that would conceal the
fact that he did not recognize her. He was already thinking about how to lure her to his
friend's flat (he had the key in his pocket) when he realized from a chance remark who
the woman was: the budding actress with the perfect tan, the one he had been trying to
reach all day.
This episode both amused and horrified him: it proved that he was as tired mentally as
physically. Two years of holiday could not be extended indefinitely.
The holiday from the operating table was also a holiday from Tereza. After hardly
seeing each other for six days, they would finally be together on Sundays, full of desire;
but, as on the evening when Tomas came back from Zurich, they were estranged and
had a long way to go before they could touch and kiss. Physical love gave them
pleasure but no consolation. She no longer cried out as she had in the past, and, at the
moment of orgasm, her grimace seemed to him to express suffering and a strange
absence. Only at night, in sleep, were they tenderly united. Holding his hand, she would
forget the chasm (the chasm of daylight) that divided them. But the nights gave him
neither the time nor the means to protect and take care of her. In the mornings, it was
heartrending to see her, and he feared for her: she looked sad and infirm.
One Sunday, she asked him to take her for a ride outside Prague. They drove to a spa,
where they found all the streets relabeled with Russian names and happened to meet
an old patient of Tomas's. Tomas was devastated by the meeting. Suddenly here was
someone talking to him again as to a doctor, and he could feel his former life bridging
the divide, coming back to him with its pleasant regularity of seeing patients and feeling
their trusting eyes on him, those eyes he had pretended to ignore but in fact savored
and now greatly missed.
Driving home, Tomas pondered the catastrophic mistake he had made by returning to
Prague from Zurich. He kept his eyes trained on the road so as to avoid looking at
Tereza. He was furious with her. Her presence at his side felt more unbearably
fortuitous than ever. What was she doing here next to him? Who put her in the basket
and sent her downstream? Why was
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