Inspired by the real-life events of a tragic love story, Love Doesn't Play Fair is a queer romantic tragedy about two young girls who fall in love despite the hateful worlds they've grown up in. At 14, Rachel Brown has been raised in a devout Christian home for her whole life. She goes to church every Sunday and even some Wednesdays. She has been taught since the moment she was old enough to understand that love is to be shared between one man and one woman, no exceptions. Rachel believed every word of this philosophy that her parents forced on her-- until she met Grace. Grace Harrah, the new girl at church, knows that she doesn't belong. She has never understood why a group of people have felt that they have the right to tell the whole world how to live and who to love. Of course, she'd never tell that to her parents. To her parents, she has always been the perfect daughter. Never falling in with the wrong people or breaking any of their rules... until they move, and she meets Rachel. Starting off as the best of friends, their love quickly showed them something about themselves that they hadn't had the courage to see before. Their love swept them through all the pain and hatred that faced their bond. Neither of the girls' families accepted their "unnatural" love for one another. Grace's family was convinced that Rachel had tainted their perfect little girl. Rachel's family went as far as to disown her completely. Still, despite the hate and the anger of their so-called-friends and family, the girls' love grew on. Their bond seemed unbreakable, until one day, when tragedy struck down on their lives. After a car accident left Grace in the hospital mute, paralyzed and with a traumatic brain injury that destroyed her memory, their love story seemed to come crashing to a halt. Will love prevail?