He could stop it.
The deaths. The accidents. The suffering.
At first, intervention feels like mercy. Tragedies vanish. Pain becomes rare. The world grows quieter, safer, more predictable.
But as disasters disappear, something else begins to fade.
Choice.
The Last Intervention is a philosophical science-fiction novel about power, restraint, and moral responsibility. It follows a man who discovers that preventing suffering also reshapes human behaviour, narrowing possibility and eroding freedom. Each act of mercy makes the next harder to refuse-until watching becomes easier than deciding.
As order replaces chaos, the cost of safety becomes impossible to ignore. The final question is no longer how much suffering can be prevented, but how much must be allowed.
A quiet, unsettling reflection on control, agency, and the burden of seeing everything-this is a story for readers who prefer ideas over spectacle and meaning over simple answers.