
by Leslie Levendale
When London surgeon Nick Wood escapes to rural Japan with his heart in pieces, he isn’t searching for anything except a place to breathe. Achi is meant to be a quiet stopgap — mountains, cedar trees, the kind of stillness he hasn’t felt in years. And then there’s Daichi Okada. A man who seems carved out of patience and quiet strength, who steps into Nick’s life with the gentlest kind of gravity. Their first meeting is sharp with fear and fluorescent light, but afterwards… he’s simply there. Turning up in small, unexpected ways. Steadying Nick with a hand on his arm. Standing close enough that Nick forgets how to speak. Looking at him as though seeing straight past the mess. Nick tries to keep to himself, but the village has other plans.Sketching by waterfalls. Lantern-lit evenings at the onsen. Neighbours who fold him into their routines with tender, wordless acceptance. And Daichi — always Daichi — watching him with that quiet, devastating attentiveness that makes something inside Nick ache for more. The trouble is, healing isn’t tidy, and desire never arrives politely.There are cultural silences to navigate, old wounds that won’t stay buried, and a slow, rising warmth between them that neither man is brave enough to name. But in the hush of the mountains, closeness becomes its own language.A shared breath. A careful touch. A feeling that refuses to be ignored. Set in the deep valleys of Nagano, The Shape of Healing is a tender, slow-burning love story about two men learning to trust the gentleness they find in each other — and the quiet, astonishing possibility of staying.
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