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Oliver Ellison has always done what's expected of him. As the pastor's son, he wears the right clothes, says the right prayers, and dates the right girls-even if none of it feels real.
Then there's Flynn Radcliffe-scrawny, sharp-eyed, and uncomfortable as he slouches in the back of the church every Sunday. He doesn't believe a word of the sermons. He doesn't sing. He'd rather be anywhere else. But his mum is insistent: if they've move to this new city for a fresh start, then God is part of the plan. When his mother meets Pastor Henry Ellison, she's convinced that their sons should be friends, hoping their "Christian bond" will help Flynn find his way.
Oliver and Flynn are forced to hang out-sitting through awkward dinners, Sunday afternoon coffee, and conversations they didn't ask for. They come from different worlds with walls built high on all sides, and neither wants to break them down. But in those forced moments together, something unexpected starts to spark: shared silences, tentative jokes, stolen glances.
Oliver starts to spiral. He starts to pray harder, go to church more, but nothing helps. He finds himself drawn to Flynn more than he should.
Will he manage to finally be himself and live the life he desires? Or will he remain stuck in this box that he has been stuck in for his entire life?