A museum archivist's deadly expertise in Victorian death rituals becomes the key to catching a serial killer-or the evidence that condemns her.Helena Marsh knows more about Victorian mourning customs than almost anyone alive. Her autism gives her an extraordinary gift for cataloging the intricate details of 19th-century funeral practices-the symbolism in mourning jewelry crafted from human hair, the strict hierarchy of Victorian burial processions, the language spoken through funeral flowers. Most people consider her fascination with post-mortem photography and death rituals unsettling. Helena considers it scholarship. But when bodies start appearing across Boston, each one meticulously arranged as a flawless reproduction of Victorian mourning scenes, her specialized knowledge stops being academic and starts being incriminating. The killer recreates historical death displays with terrifying accuracy-mirror draping to trap departed spirits, jet bead wreaths following authentic Victorian techniques, bodies positioned exactly as they appear in centuries-old photographs. These aren't random staging choices. They're details only an expert would recognize, the kind of historical precision that points directly to Helena's world. This psychological thriller featuring an autistic detective consultant plunges readers into a gripping mystery where neurodivergent pattern recognition becomes both weapon and liability, where special interests transform into criminal evidence, and where understanding death might be the only path to preventing murder.Every crime scene tells a story Helena authored-not through violence, but through years of published research, online tutorials, and public lectures about Victorian funeral customs. The serial killer isn't just knowledgeable; they're following her work like a textbook, transforming her scholarly articles into murder blueprints. Detective James Ortega recruits Helena to profile a killer who shares her obsession with mourning rituals and historical death practices, but the deeper she digs into this suspense mystery, the more her own name surfaces as a suspect. All four victims attended her museum exhibition on memento mori traditions. Each murder incorporates techniques from her private forum discussions with Victorian mourning enthusiasts and funeral history collectors. This crime thriller with strong female protagonist weaves autism representation throughout, showing how Helena's literal thinking and difficulty reading social cues complicate police interrogations even as her encyclopedic recall of death customs cracks the case wide open. She's forced to surveil her own community-the jewelry makers, re-enactors, and grief ritual scholars who share her passion.The pattern becomes clear too late: someone has been studying Helena for years, absorbing her expertise, preparing to honor her the way Victorians honored their dead. When her name appears on the killer's victim list, Helena must use every detail she's ever learned about Victorian death culture to survive someone who believes murder is the highest form of historical tribute. This detective mystery novel delivers relentless psychological suspense while exploring themes of grief, neurodiversity, and society's uncomfortable relationship with death. Readers craving intelligent mystery thriller books with autistic main characters, historical crime elements, and murder investigation plots will be captivated by this story where academic knowledge becomes criminal motive, where special interests blur into dangerous fixation, and where the only person who can stop a killer obsessed with Victorian funeral customs is the woman whose life's work inspired the murders. Perfect for fans of psychological crime fiction that combines procedural tension with unique neurodivergent perspectives, authentic historical research, and thrillers that examine how passion transforms into pathology.