Tiago was a young historian, obsessed with the —the oldest diplomatic pact in the world. He spent his days in a dusty archive, tracing the lineage of the 1386 Treaty of Windsor. But his own life was lacking the very "union" he studied, until he met Clara.
Clara was a jeweler from Rio de Janeiro. She had come to Pernambuco to study the traditional metalwork of the Northeast. To her, an aliança wasn't a treaty signed by kings; it was a promise forged in fire—a physical circle representing a bond that had no beginning and no end.
However, as they researched the ring together, they realized it wasn't a royal artifact. It belonged to an ordinary couple from the 1960s who had lived in , a community in Rio built as part of a "Good Neighbor" alliance between the U.S. and Brazil. The ring was a symbol of a different kind of alliance—one of community and survival in the face of hardship.
In the humid heart of , the air always smelled of scorched sugar and rain. For Tiago, the town was more than a place on a map; it was a legacy of sugarcane mills and old unions that had bound families to the land for generations.