Vows of Freedom
Can lying actually lead to freedom? Seth, dressed like his sister, just married Lucias in a contractual deal between families. Seth's spoiled twin, who got everything from their parents, has bolted with her boyfriend, ditching her responsibilities. Despite his fears of Lucias' eventual reaction to the deceit he willingly binds himself to this stranger for a family's love that would never come.
Despite his family looking down on him for being gay, Seth steps up, picking up the pieces of his sister's mess, and working his fingers to the bone to fix things. And that's when he stumbles on something unexpected - his own kind of freedom.
Starting with a fake identity, Seth's partnership with Lucias starts feeling less like a hoax and more like a lifeline. This unlikely team-up lets him finally break free from the chains of family bias.
In this masquerade, Seth finally finds his real self, escaping the trap of what everyone else thinks he should be. So, can lying pave the way to liberation? Can Lucias help Seth rewrite the rules for his own future? Could playing pretend, be just the ticket to breaking out of the mould?