The Savant is a gripping, realistic murder mystery about power, institutions, and the quiet danger of being noticed.When a man is killed in a public place and the case fades without answers, most people move on. A city does. The media does. Official language smooths the edges and the story disappears.But a seventeen-year-old boy living in a residential care facility notices what vanishes.Nearly nonverbal and socially withdrawn, he spends his days online, tracking subtle changes in public records, local notices, and news sites-updates that appear briefly, then quietly change or disappear. He doesn't look for meaning. He simply sees what others miss.An investigative journalist begins asking questions about the murder and uncovers a different kind of mystery: not who committed the crime, but how institutions decide when it stops mattering. As she follows the trail of revisions, omissions, and administrative language, she realizes her most valuable source is also the most vulnerable.Care becomes observation. Protection becomes control. And attention itself becomes a threat.Grounded in real-world procedures, journalism, and institutional behavior, The Savant is a slow-burn crime novel with no supernatural elements and no easy villains. It explores how systems avoid accountability, how language reshapes reality, and how truth is often buried not by force, but by consensus.This novel will appeal to readers who enjoy: Literary crime fictionRealistic murder mysteriesInvestigative journalism novelsPsychological suspense without goreStories about institutions, power, and controlQuiet, intelligent protagonistsThought-provoking contemporary fictionThere are no heroes shouting for justice here. Only people deciding-carefully-what to notice, what to protect, and what to let disappear.The Savant is a novel about the cost of attention in a world that prefers silence-and what happens when someone refuses to look away.