asked Marina. The Count and Anna, who were sitting side by side on the couch in the actress’s suite, answered in the affirmative. With a fitting sense of ceremony, Marina opened the bedroom door to reveal Sofia. The dress that the seamstress had fashioned for the concert was a long-sleeved gown in the trumpet style—fitted above the waist and flared below the knee. The blue of the fabric, which recalled the depths of the ocean, provided an otherworldly contrast to the fairness of Sofia’s skin and the blackness of her hair. Anna let out a gasp. Marina beamed. And the Count? Alexander Rostov was neither scientist nor sage; but at the age of sixty-four he was wise enough to know that life does not proceed by leaps and bounds. It unfolds. At any given moment, it is the manifestation of a thousand transitions. Our faculties wax and wane, our experiences accumulate, and our opinions evolve—if not glacially, then at least gradually.