Four Seasons.

“We can’t waltz forever, Grant.”

“We can damn well try.”


Season 1 introduces Murder LaVoe — magical musician, ageless woman, and the only person alive who can find what’s been stolen because she was there when it disappeared. Partnered with NYPD Detective Grant Noble, she works a series of artifact recoveries across New York City while navigating an old flame, a new love, and a shadow operation that seems to know exactly who she is. The season builds toward a finale that reframes everything that came before it — what the artifacts add up to, what the curse has really cost her, and what one man will offer without hesitation when she finally runs out of time.


Season 2 takes Murder and Grant to London — a city she knows differently than New York. Older. Heavier. Full of buildings she watched go up. A new threat arrives from an unexpected direction, bringing with it a young woman with a broken heart, a mysterious watch, and knowledge of the timeline that shouldn’t be possible. As Murder hunts answers about her own origins, the past stops being backstory. It becomes active plot. What the show has been quietly building toward since Mary whispered a single name outside the Met begins, finally, to answer itself.


Season 3 raises the stakes in the most dangerous way possible — the secret gets out. When the existence of magical people becomes public knowledge, Murder’s carefully constructed life fractures at every seam. Old enemies surface. New ones organize. And a threat so coordinated and so brutal that it forces the entire team to choose between staying hidden and fighting back marks the moment the show stops asking whether the world can handle the truth. It can’t. They fight anyway.


Season 4 is Magical Manhattan. The world has changed, the school is real, and Murder is pregnant. But the Mayor wants answers, the FBI wants cooperation, and something that cannot be explained by any timeline anyone has encountered is moving through the city sideways. The show that began with one woman trying to stand still in her favorite borough arrives at its most ambitious chapter — and discovers that standing still was never really the plan.