She placed a hand on his shoulder. "Then it's our job to ensure the ghosts receive justice, William. Even in the age of electricity."

Toronto, 1908. When a beloved silent film actress is found dead during the screening of a new moving picture, Detective William Murdoch must navigate the glitz and hidden dangers of the city’s burgeoning film industry—a case made more difficult by the fact that the only witness is a malfunctioning motion picture camera.

If you'd like, I can also explain how this story ties into specific subplots or character dynamics from Season 11 (e.g., Murdoch and Julia's marriage, Brackenreid's promotion struggles, or Higgins's misadventures).

Beside him, Dr. Julia Ogden, now his wife, watched with scientific curiosity. "It's remarkable, William. The illusion of life, captured frame by frame."

The final frame burned to a crisp as the film snapped. In the darkness, the only light left was the glow of Murdoch’s relentless curiosity.

The film’s star, the incandescent Clara Bowden, was on screen in a dramatic death scene, drowning in a painted lake. The audience applauded her theatrical convulsions. But when the lights rose for the intermission, the real Clara Bowden did not rise from her velvet seat in the front row. She remained slumped forward, a thin, almost invisible wire garrote embedded deep around her throat.