In the second half of the XIX century, at the time of slavery in Brazil, as during other inhuman moments in world history, the freedom and the rights of countless people were deliberately taken by force in the name of power, money, and the greed. In this cruel setting, Lucya's fate is decided by her father, the feared Baron Rodolfo, proud and insensitive, the patriarch of a renowned and powerful family of coffee growers. For many years, the Baron, an inveterate gambler, squanders the fortune of the family, until one day, his compulsion leads him to incur a huge debt that leads him to bankruptcy, losing the farm and all his slaves. Ruined and humiliated, the powerful Baron Rodolfo finds himself obliged for the first time to accept the conditions imposed by another person, the cunning and unscrupulous Frederico. The coward Rodolfo gives his daughter's hand to his tormentor, a ruthless and cruel man, who conditions the marriage to the beautiful Lucya, as a non-negotiable part of the debt payment. Desperate and unaware of the truth, Lucya finds herself obliged to accept the unwelcome proposal of Frederico, sacrificing her life to save the family. Circumstances of life have given Lucya lives an unhappy marriage which affects her entire life. Filled with hatred by the coldness and rejection of his wife, Frederico inflicts consistent abuse on Lucya, surrounded by refinements of sadism and cruelty. Lucya's resilience and faith give her the love and strength to not give up on life, even more so when she discovers her protective real-life angels in two of the slaves of the farm: mother Nonô and her son Oxalufã. Throughout this drama of hate and love, arrogance and humility, insanity and wisdom, revenge and forgiveness, revolt and resignation, fear and faith, disillusion and hope, the hand of fate, reaches the characters involved in this story, bringing opportunities for learning and redemption, making them comprehend that, after all, nothing really matters, only love.