You can change your job, your city, your identity, but there are some things you can never escape from. In this gripping family drama 'Hiding', they may make Troy Quig and his family pay the price of their lives. After a botched drug deal, Troy (played by James Stewart) must bring his family to a witness protection organization in exchange for testimony against his former employer and notorious crime boss Nils Vandenberg (played by Marcus Graham). With the emergence of a new name and identity, the Quig family was taken away from their sunny home on the Gold Coast and abandoned as the Swift family in a safe house in western Sydney. But the chaos brought immense pressure to everyone. Lincoln Swift's cover as a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Criminal Psychology at a university in Sydney fundamentally challenged him. He was told to bow his head and meet trainer John Pinder (played by Stephen Curry) to testify. But the academic teaching of the department began to conflict with Lincoln's real-life experiences. Lincoln's wife Rebecca (played by Kate Jenkinson) had to give up her nursing career and stop all contact with her mother Jenny (played by Paula Duncan), brother Costa Kririch (played by Nathan Page), and her pregnant sister-in-law and best friend Dimitri (played by Jody Gordon). The pressure of isolation and protecting the safety of her family caused losses, and Rebecca contacted an old friend, but the consequences were serious. A bureaucratic mistake led Mitchell (played by Lincoln Younes) and Tara (played by Olivia DeJong) into a performing arts school. For aspiring 15-year-old Tara, this is a happy outcome, but for 17-year-old surfer Lincoln, it is a torment as he desperately wants to restore his old life, especially his beautiful girlfriend Kelly (Jenna Kratzel). Apart from the pain of this teenager, there is no phone or Facebook, no text messages or Twitter. Because a trace may lead the murderer to their doorstep. As the dysfunctional Swift family adapts to their new world, living in an environment constantly threatened by corrupt police or internal leaks from witness protection organizations, an unexpected phone call triggers an emotional turmoil that could uncover their disguise and allow those who hoped Lincoln would remain silent to shoot at him and his loved ones.