Dr. Arash is at a stage in his life where he is surrounded by all kinds of problems, driving him to the brink of madness. His first major problem is that after eight years of marriage, his wife has suddenly filed for divorce. She has a lawyer who calls Dr. Arash every day, threatening him that if he does not voluntarily give at least 90% of his assets to his wife and then agree to the divorce process, the lawyer will "leave him alone." Otherwise, the lawyer ominously hints that there are hundreds of ways to handle this, one of which might be that Arash could suddenly and mysteriously die, perhaps in a car accident or some other way, with the police never finding a trace of the killer. But, the lawyer insists, he is a merciful man who prefers that everything ends peacefully.
One night, while an old friend of Dr. Arash is visiting him, the friend suggests that Arash should escape for a while, go to a remote village far from Tehran, turn off his phone, and cut all ties with the outside world. The friend insists so much that Dr. Arash finally agrees. Voluntarily, he moves to a quiet, peaceful village in northern Iran, near the border with Russia, and becomes the local doctor of the village clinic. Little does he know that strange, dangerous, and life-threatening events are waiting for him.