He loved her in silence. She thought he had stopped. By the time she understood, he was gone.
A husband quietly breaking under the weight of everything he cannot say. A wife who mistakes his silence for distance. A marriage slowly unraveling, not from a lack of love, but from everything left unspoken.
As the silence between them grows, he retreats deeper into himself, carrying pain he no longer knows how to explain. She believes he no longer cares, never realizing that behind his silence is exhaustion, heartbreak, and a love he does not know how to show.
Then one day, he leaves behind only a note.
And suddenly, everything she believed about her marriage begins to fall apart.
Forced to relive the moments she once misunderstood, she uncovers a devastating
The man she thought had stopped loving her had been loving her all along.
Last Option is an emotional story about love, silence, and the cost of understanding too late.
Dilaware Khan writes stories that live in silence, the kind that lingers in empty rooms and unanswered questions. His work explores the minds of people standing at the edge of sanity, of faith, of meaning. With quiet intensity, he captures the inner storms of those who cannot conform to the noise of the world.
Blending philosophy, emotion, and lyric minimalism, Khan’s fiction examines how language shapes truth, how memory resists erasure, and how conscience survives under control.
His prose is meditative yet sharp, driven by moral inquiry and the haunting beauty of thought. Khan’s writing does not offer comfort; it invites reflection. His characters do not seek escape, they seek understanding.
For readers drawn to the quiet rebellion of the human mind, his stories are not simply read, they are experienced.
Things are are not always as it seems. Many people are just misunderstood.
Reading this book helped me to understand both sides. Going forward, I will try to look at both sides and try hard to communicate better by really listening. Death should not be the last option.