He had read every paper Dante Reyes had ever published. He had annotated them, argued with them in the margins, and drawn careful lines through his own underlinings as if that could undo the fact that the arguments had been correct. What Matteo Alieri had not planned for was Dante himself.When art conservator Matteo Alieri takes on the restoration of a heritage-listed estate in Connecticut, he brings with him everything he has spent twelve years building: meticulous methods, ironclad contracts, and walls so well-constructed they could pass for original plasterwork. He does not bring room for a co-conservator — least of all Dante Reyes, the structural specialist whose published work Matteo has been quietly, privately, and furiously disagreeing with for three years.Dante moves through the world the way he moves through buildings: fast, warm, arriving at the point sideways, with an instinct for what a thing needs that Matteo finds both professionally maddening and impossible to dismiss. Over ninety days of shared scaffolding, late nights in a lamp-lit gallery, and arguments that are really about something else entirely, the estate's damaged fresco slowly comes back to life — and Matteo's carefully maintained professional distance begins to do the opposite.Wrong Kind of Permanent is a queer slow-burn romance about two men who speak the language of objects better than they speak the language of feeling — and what happens when the work they are doing together becomes indistinguishable from the life they are building. It is about grief carried quietly inside a philosophy, about the ethics of leaving traces, and about what it means to make something permanent in a discipline that forbids it.Can a man who has spent twelve years writing irreversibility out of every contract learn to let something stay?