ATTENTION: SPOILERS BELOW !
Very well. Here is the "backstory," as we currently understand it. (Note that
this is an organic entity, still unfolding, and some, or even many, details may change
before the publication of Brimstone.) This page will only make sense to you if
you have read the mass-market edition of Cabinet of Curiosities, or at least page
580 of the mass-market edition. And remember, the information below will reveal all—
it isn’t called a ‘spoiler’ for nothing.
You have been warned!
Though Enoch Leng hated humanity with a passion, he— with a capriciousness typical
of mankind— grew to feel an affection for one person, and one person alone. That
person was an abandoned waif named Constance Greene, younger sister of one Mary Greene of
Water Street. (Mary was an early victim of Leng’s whose remains are discovered by
Nora Kelly and Agent Pendergast early on in Cabinet of Curiosities.) Leng
would have met Constance in his "work" at the Houses of Industry in lower
Manhattan, where orphans were once housed. Perhaps it was something in Constance herself,
or perhaps it was a vestigial sense of guilt within Leng, but for whatever the reason he
grew fond enough of this last surviving member of the Greene family to take her into his
home and, in effect, adopt her. This would have been around the year 1882, when Constance
was six. The life-prolonging elixir that he used on himself he also gave to her. This
served to greatly retard her aging.
For over a hundred years, the two lived a reclusive existence together in the slowly
decaying mansion on Riverside Drive. Although Leng eventually grew tired of life and
stopped taking the elixir, he continued to administer his (now-synthetic) formula to
Constance. Consequently, she aged very slowly: by the end of the twentieth century she
was, physically, no older than a girl of nineteen. However, over those many years, Leng
had lavished his deep erudition on her. Constance had the run of Leng’s collections
and his extensive library, and so— though in appearance she had barely reached
adulthood— mentally she had achieved several lifetime’s worth of learning and
experience.
And then the unexpected happened. Anthony Fairhaven, in his desperate search for
‘The Surgeon’ and his secret arcanum for life prolongation, tracked Enoch Leng
to his mansion on Riverside Drive. Leng, now physically an old man, was powerless against
Fairhaven’s feverish brutality. Tired of life, Leng died amidst Fairhaven’s
interrogations without ever revealing his secret formula.
Throughout all this, Constance Greene remained undetected. Shocked beyond measure by
the sudden, violent assault on the only person she cared for and on the home she had not
stepped out of for more than a century, she retreated into the mansion’s secret
honeycomb of passages, into the deepest levels, where the rambling sub-basements of the
edifice gave out onto the banks of the Hudson River. From concealed spots known only to
her, she watched— powerless to act— as the climactic confrontation told in the
last pages of Cabinet of Curiosities played out.
Ultimately, Fairhaven died and Special Agent Pendergast— the last surviving
relative of Enoch Leng— claimed the mansion and its fabulous collections for himself.
After finding and burning Leng’s formula for life prolongation, Pendergast departs
from New York for a time, leaving the house in the hands of his acquaintance, Wren, who is
given the job of cataloguing its cabinets of curiosity.
Meanwhile, as the weeks pass, Constance watches. She lives on scraps of stored food and
on nocturnal forays out onto the twisted banks and darkened streets adjoining the Hudson.
The terrifying events that have shattered her long-sheltered life are so traumatizing that
for months she keeps her presence in the house a secret. Wren, hard at work in the
basement collections, is in fact aware of a feeling of being watched, and of occasionally
hearing the patter of retreating footsteps— but it is not until Pendergast is
preparing to return to New York (as described in the final chapters of Still Life With
Crows) that Constance at last plucks up the courage to reveal herself to him.
When Pendergast learns about Constance’s existence— and when, in addition,
her learns her remarkable history— he realizes he has no choice but to take her under
his wing. Not only was the girl uniquely ill-equipped to set out on her own, but along
with the house, Pendergast had inherited Leng’s familial guilt as well. And so,
though she will probably remain a secondary character, Constance will become
Pendergast’s ward— as well as research assistant, social secretary, amanuensis,
seer: the beautiful young girl with the eyes that seem to possess, unaccountably, a depth
of almost limitless experience.
This is not the end of the story, of course. There is more--much more--in the novels that make up the 'Pendergast trilogy:' Brimstone, Dance of Death, and The Book of the Dead. |