The story's hero, Orin (played by Asmus), is a young but reclusive mortician who lacks the self-confidence to romance any women other than those who've left for the next life. He's a close cousin to Little Shop of Horrors' Seymour and of course Little Shop has an Orin of its own (the dentist), so the homage is obvious. This Orin has been examining (and romancing) the corpses of the female victims of a series of mass murders. Á la Six Feet Under, we see the corpses conversing with Orin as if they were alive. When Julie (Brooke Bagnall), the ex-girlfriend of a male victim, visits Orin to ID her late boyfriend's body, a mutual attraction develops between Orin and Julie. Orin is challenged by his first opportunity for a relationship with a living woman, but the challenges get greater when Dana (Megan Johns), the DNA forensic scientist hired by the police to help solve the crimes, becomes a rival to Julie for Orin's affections. By the end of act one, Orin has become the leading suspect for the murders, and we find out (prematurely, I would say), who the real killer is.