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Stella Rosevelt

Chapter 27: CHAPTER XXVI. “WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?”
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About This Book

A young orphaned woman travels alone across the Atlantic to join distant relatives and immediately confronts storms of circumstance, poverty, and social suspicion. The narrative follows her endurance through guardianship disputes, malicious falsehoods, and a critical mistake that imperils her standing, while romantic entanglements and unexpected alliances complicate matters. She faces betrayal, ingratitude, and physical peril, yet presses on with sacrifices and resourcefulness. Gradual explanations, legal and moral reckonings, and rescuing interventions lead to restored trust, personal growth, and a hopeful resolution that emphasizes perseverance and fidelity to principle.

CHAPTER XXVI.
“WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?”

Newport was teeming with all that was gay, beautiful, and attractive during this particular season of which we write.

Never had so much wealth and luxury been represented there, or so many elegant equipages seen driving through the streets or along the smooth, sweeping beach.

Not the least attractive among these equipages was the light and airy, though costly phaeton of “Mr. Rosevelt’s ward,” with its embroidered lap-robes, its luxurious velvet-cushioned seats, its plump, sleek, and spirited gray ponies in their gold-mounted harnesses.

Star had created quite a sensation when she arrived at the hotel where they had taken rooms; and the tall, distinguished old gentleman, with such silvery hair and beard, and who appeared so devoted to her, was scarcely less a target for all eyes. But when it began to be whispered that Miss Gladstone was not only the heiress of Jacob Rosevelt, the millionaire, but also the authoress of that bright little book which for a year had created such a sensation in New York circles, the excitement increased, and everybody was on the qui vive to obtain an introduction.

When, on the second evening after her arrival, she came into the great parlors of the hotel—for there was to be a grand hop or assembly there that night—leaning on Mr. Rosevelt’s arm, and looking “so divinely fair” in her shimmering robe of cream-colored silk and mist-like tulle, garnished with velvet-leaved, golden-hearted pansies, her shining hair coiled like a crown about her small head, with a little cluster of pansies nestling lovingly among its glossy plaits, every eye was attracted by her loveliness, and everybody—of the masculine gender, at least—was ready to “rave over” her, “swear by” her, and “fight for” her if need be.

It is needless to say that she was not allowed to become a wall-flower, and it was amusing to observe the maneuvers of the battalion of gallant young knights who swarmed about her, like bees around their queen, eager to secure an introduction.

And now the excitement for Star began.

She was whisked away to the ball-room, and the evening sped like a vision of delight.

She had been taught to dance at home, notwithstanding the fact that her father was a clergyman, for in all English homes dancing is considered a necessary accomplishment, because it imparts ease and grace to the manners of the young.

Mr. Rosevelt followed, for he enjoyed looking upon the merry dancers, and taking up his station near a window, and by a stand of flowers where he was partially shielded from observation, he watched his pet with a fond smile upon his lips, proud of her beauty, proud of her intelligence and of the admiration she was attracting.

While standing here, a group of half a dozen ladies and gentlemen gathered near him, and he overheard a conversation which amused him, and caused at the same time something of a feeling of triumph to pervade his heart.

“Have you seen the new arrivals?” asked a gentleman of one of his companions.

“No; what new arrivals do you refer to? There are many every day.”

“An old codger from New York—rich as a king, they say—and his ward, who bids fair to be the beauty of the season.”

Indeed!” returned the lady, assuming a piqued tone. “How dare you make such an assertion, and in the presence of three acknowledged beauties, too?”

“I beg pardon if I have offended,” the gentleman roguishly replied; “but—I have had Washingtonian instructions regarding the principle of truth.”

The young lady tapped him playfully upon the arm with her fan, while she remarked, significantly:

“How glad I am that you have told me of it!” whereupon the whole party joined in a laugh at the “truthful” gentleman’s expense.

“But about this fair charmer,” the lady pursued; “who is she, and what is the name of this ‘old codger’ who is ‘rich as a king’?”

“The lady’s name is Miss Gladstone, and she is not only beautiful, charming, and rich, but is also the author of ‘Chatsworth’s Pride,’ which you have doubtless read.”

“Oh! a blue-stocking!” cried the gay girl, with well-affected horror; and just here another voice chimed in—a voice which made Mr. Rosevelt start and listen more intently:

“Miss Gladstone! How strange I never heard the author’s name before! There was only a simple star upon the title page where the author’s name should have been. Mamma!” in a startled tone, as if a strange idea had suddenly come into the speaker’s mind, “it cannot possibly be Stella Gladstone, can it?”

“Certainly not,” returned Mrs. Richards—for both she and Josephine were among the group referred to, having come from a neighboring hotel to attend the hop. “Such a thing cannot be possible; she could not write a book.”

The woman spoke contemptuously, and yet the utterance of that name produced an uneasy sensation in her mind.

“What is the gentleman’s name? Whose ward did you say she is?” she asked, a moment later, thinking that would throw some light on the subject.

“I declare I have forgotten,” the gentleman returned; “it’s a high-sounding name, though, and he is an aristocratic-looking old fellow, too. By the way, Miss Richards,” he continued, turning to the young lady, “I am willing to wager a handsome fan against a new pair of gloves that Miss Gladstone’s phaeton and pair of ponies will be the envy of every lady in Newport, for a more trappy turn-out I’ve never seen in my life.”

“Then she drives her own ponies, does she? Well, I must say you have aroused my curiosity to the highest notch, and I’d like to see this paragon of perfection, Mr. Pendleton,” Josephine said, a feeling of jealousy springing up in her heart at hearing another’s praises sounded so profusely.

“You can be gratified, for there she stands now—that slight, graceful girl in the cream-colored silk trimmed with pansies,” replied Mr. Pendleton, drawing her attention to the spot where Star stood surrounded by an admiring crowd.

Her back was turned toward them, and they could not judge of her beauty; but they saw a tall, willowy figure in trailing robes of exceeding richness, a stately head crowned with golden hair, and there was a familiar something about the fair stranger which made both mother and daughter look more closely, while their eyes were filled with anxious foreboding.

“She is elegantly dressed, I must confess,” Josephine said, putting up her glass to get a better view of the “belle of the evening;” “and, mamma,” she added, in a lower tone, “is it my imagination, or is there something really familiar in that figure? Can it be Stella?

“Impossible! What could have put such a foolish notion into your head? Where under heavens could she get money enough to flourish in such style?” Mrs. Richards retorted, impatiently.

“But if she is really the author of the book—it has been very popular, you know——”

“Nonsense!” interrupted her mother. “I tell you such a thing could not be possible.”

Nevertheless, Mrs. Richards was closely watching the object of their conversation, and her heart was beating with a painful throb, for the young girl did strangely resemble that poor orphan whom she had so despised and ill-treated, and who had fled from her tyranny.

But her uneasiness increased, for just now she observed a tall, white-haired gentleman moving toward the girl, and upon reaching her side, he bent down and spoke a few words in her ear.

His back also was toward them, but the matron’s face was dark with trouble; she grew white with the sudden fear which possessed her, and she moved forward to get a better view of the couple.

At that instant Star turned and lifted her bright face to reply to Mr. Rosevelt, who had left his position by the stand of flowers when she ceased dancing and approached her, her eyes shining, her cheeks glowing, and her coral lips wreathed with bright smiles, and both Josephine and Mrs. Richards recognized her instantly.

A low cry of surprise and dismay broke from Josephine Richards’ lips.

“It is—it surely is Stella Gladstone,” she said; “and that man talking to her is certainly Uncle Jacob Rosevelt! What can it all mean?”

“Rosevelt! Yes, that is the name,” said Mr. Pendleton, who had caught it, and who had first called their attention to Star. “‘Jacob Rosevelt, the millionaire,’ I heard him called this afternoon, but I forget names so easily.”

“Jacob Rosevelt, the millionaire!” repeated Mrs. Richards, with white lips and astonished eyes, while a tumult of emotions raged within her heart.

“Yes; he must be very rich, for they have every appearance of it, and Miss Gladstone’s turn-out, which was sent on before them, is a marvel of luxury and elegance. But—do you know them?” Mr. Pendleton asked, regarding her curiously.

Mrs. Richards’ thoughts worked very rapidly.

If this was really Jacob Rosevelt, and she could not doubt the evidence of her own eyes, he must by some stroke of luck have recovered a portion, if not the whole, of his fortune since leaving her house; and in this case he became at once an entirely different person from the feeble, poverty-stricken individual who had come to her a little more than a year ago to sue for food and shelter.

He had been a person of no account then—one to be ignored and neglected, for there was nothing to be gained by treating him otherwise.

But “Jacob Rosevelt, the millionaire,” if such he had become again, must be propitiated, flattered, and cajoled.

Therefore she had a new role to play, and she would begin at once by claiming him as a relative before these friends of hers.

“It would be very strange if I did not know him, for he is my father’s brother,” she said, calling to her lips her blandest smiles; “but I am sure I had no idea that he was here in Newport. Come, Josephine, we must go and speak to him;” and she drew the astonished girl away before they could question them any further, and she wished to collect her own scattered senses a little before encountering those two whom she had so deeply injured.

“What can it mean, mamma?” Josephine repeated, with a blank look, for she had no longer any doubt about the identity of the strangers.

“I don’t know, but I am going to find out,” she answered resolutely.

“Then you are convinced that it is Stella?”

“Yes, it is that girl fast enough; there can be no mistake about it; and what a sensation she is making! She seems to checkmate us at every move.”

“Where can they have been hiding all this time?” Josephine asked.

“How do you suppose I know?” retorted her mother, sharply. “I am more interested to know where all the money comes from to enable them to cut such a swell. Why, the dress she has on must have cost a cool three hundred, to say nothing about her other expensive fixings; and then you heard what Pendleton said about her carriage and ponies.”

“Well, he said she was the author of ‘Chatsworth’s Pride,’ and if that is so, it must have brought her a good deal.”

“Pooh! you don’t suppose one book is going to enable her to live and dress like a young empress, do you?” returned Mrs. Richards, scornfully. “No; Uncle Jacob has recovered his fortune, or else——”

“Or else what?”

“He has played it upon us.”

“Played what upon us?”

“Why, poverty, you goose!”

“Mamma! that would be too dreadful. I never thought of such a thing,” Josephine said, feeling almost faint.

“Nor I, until this moment; but I can account for their appearance here to-night in no other way. If he has done this thing, and that girl gets all his money, it will be a bitter pill to swallow, I can tell you.”

“But she could inherit nothing; she is no blood relation.”

“But he could make a will.”

“And we could break it.”

“Not a bit of it; your Uncle Jacob is keen enough to look out for that, I assure you. But come this way; they are passing out into the hall, and I am going to sift this matter at once.”

She drew her daughter from the upper door of the parlor, just as Star and Mr. Rosevelt passed out at the lower one, intending to waylay them and demand an explanation of their presence.

They turned and came toward those waiting women, walking slowly and chatting pleasantly, and wholly unconscious of the exciting interview in store for them.