If this were a dream, it’d be such a hyperrealistic dream. Who would’ve thought destiny would play tricks on ‘Nakun’ by sending him back almost four hundred years ago to the Ayuttaya era while asleep? Amid confusion and panic, the people he meets there call him ‘Klao,’ the son of the convicted nobleman who’s been missing. Now, Nakun has to pretend to be Klao while finding a way back to the present time and solving mysteries of the real Klao. However, the more he searches for clues, the more puzzles he finds. Plus, there’s this ‘Muun Phop,’ Klao’s trusted non-blood brother, who keeps his eyes on him all the time. And he found himself starting to feel increasingly fluttering in his heart under Muun Phop's gaze.
Because he predicted that his friend's big brother would face a life-threatening accident, 'Inthu,' a famous YouTuber and fortune teller with precognitive abilities, immediately became a fraud in the eyes of 'Dr. Thapfah,' who believes in neither fate nor fortune-telling. Of course, the renowned fortune teller decided not to care and vowed to stay out of his life, considering his warning was already given. That was until the doctor accidentally got entangled with a particular patient, leading him to be targeted by someone lurking in the shadows—exactly as he'd foreseen. Left with no choice, the fortune teller had to take in the man who'd always been at odds with him, all because of a request from his friend to help her brother hide while waiting for the police to catch the culprit. In a small, remote village atop the hills, the hearts of the doctor and the fortune teller gradually grew warmer without them even realizing it.
Chop-khun never thought he’d get cheated on by his ex, someone who had been with him for so many years. The jerk even stole their joint YouTube channel without feeling an ounce of guilt. Determined to rise above, Chop-khun started his own channel, aiming to surpass his ex’s. And the first thing he needed? A cameraman! To his surprise, one of the applicants was Intouch, a famous cameraman who shouldn’t be interested in Chop-khun’s fledgling channel.