A serial killer terrorizes women in 1920s Philadelphia.
Socialite Edie Shippen, who’s been a shadow of her former self ever since influenza nearly killed her, returns from three years on the West Coast battling depression and migraines to find Frances, her twin sister, engaged to Edie’s lifelong love, Dr. Theo Pepper. At the same time, Dr. Gilbert Lawless, the brother of Edie’s maid, Lizzie, continues to have debilitating flashbacks to his experiences in the war and works at the morgue because he doesn’t trust himself with living patients. He’s one of the initial viewers of the body of a headless woman found on a creek bank, drugged and electrocuted. She’ll be the first in a series of gruesome murders. Living in her grandmother’s mansion, where she feels restricted by old-fashioned ideas and the strain of putting on a brave face, Edie joins some of her free-spirited cousin Rebecca’s activities in an attempt to become a modern woman. Before the war, Gilbert, who’s from a vastly different world than Edie, had married a society girl, who died in childbirth, leaving him with a daughter his wife’s family rejected. Edie and Gilbert meet after she’s mugged and Lizzie takes her to have him check out her injuries. The next corpse found on the creek bank has also been electrocuted and divested of all her organs; when she’s identified as Rebecca, Edie springs into action. Lizzie disappears too as the slaughter continues, and Gilbert and Edie develop a relationship that turns them into sleuths and lovers desperately seeking a ruthless killer.
Expect plenty of surprises in a period tale in which love conquers all societal differences.