What holds this together? What gives life significance? What gives it shape and depth? In the end it comes for us all. So why do we wait for it instead of making it happen? What am I waiting for?

I wish I"d done better. I wish I could have done more. I close my eyes. Tears slip out. I hear the boots, the rubber boots. Jake"s boots. My boots. Out there, in here.

He stands at the door. It creaks open. We"re together. Him. Me. Us. At last.

What if it doesn"t get better? What if death isn"t an escape? What if the maggots continue to feed and feed and feed and continue to be felt?

I hold my hands behind my back and look at him. He"s wearing something on his head and face. He"s still wearing the yellow rubber gloves. I want to look away, to close my eyes.



He takes a step toward me. He gets up close. Close enough that I can reach out and touch him. I can hear him breathing under the mask. I can smell him. I know what he wants. He"s ready. For the end. He"s ready.

Critical balance is needed in everything. Our temperature-controlled incubators in which we grow large volumes, more than twenty liters, of yeast and E. coli cultures that have been genetically engineered to overexpress a protein of our choosing.

When we choose to bring the end closer, we create a new beginning.

It"s all the extra ma.s.s we can"t see that makes the formation of galaxies and the rotational velocities of stars around galaxies mathematically possible.

He lifts the bottom of the mask off his chin and mouth. I can see the stubble on his chin, his chapped, cracked lips. I put a hand on his shoulder. I have to concentrate to keep my hand from shaking. We"re all here together now. All of us.

One day on Venus is like one hundred and fifteen Earth days. . . . It"s the brightest object in the sky.

He puts a metal hanger from the closet into my hand. "I"m thinking of ending things," he says.

I straighten it out and bend it in half so both pointy ends stick in the same direction.

"I"m sorry for everything," I say. I"m sorry, I think.

"You can do this. You can help me now."

He"s right. I have to. We have to help. That"s why we"re here.

I bring my right hand around and jam it in as hard as I can. Twice, in and out.

One more. In. Out. I slam the ends into my neck, upward, under my chin, with all my strength.

And then I fall onto my side. More blood. Something-spit, blood-bubbles from my mouth. So many small punctures. It hurts, all of it, but we feel nothing.

It"s done now, and I"m sorry.

I look at my hands. One is shaking. I try to steady one with the other. I can"t. I slump back into the closet. A single unit, back to one. Me. Only me. Jake. Alone again.

I decided. I had to. No more thinking. I answered the question.

-There"s one other thing I wanted to ask about: the note.

-What?

-The note. Near his body. I was told there was a note.

-You heard about that?

-Yes.

-It wasn"t so much of a note as . . . well, it was detailed.

-Detailed?

-Some kind of diary, maybe, or story.

-Story?

-I mean, he wrote about characters, or maybe they were people he knew. But then, he"s in the story, too, except he"s not the one telling it. Well, maybe he is. In a way. I don"t know. I"m not sure I follow it. I can"t tell what"s true and what"s not. And yet . . .

-Does it explain why? Does it explain why he . . . ended things?

-I"m not sure. We"re not really sure. Maybe.

-What do you mean? He either explained it or he didn"t.

-It"s just . . .

-What?

-It"s not that simple. I don"t know. Here. Look at this.

-What is all this? This is a lot of pages. Is this what he wrote?

-Yes. You should read it. But maybe start at the end. Then circle back. First, though, I think you better sit down.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.

Nita p.r.o.novost. Alison Callahan. Samantha Haywood.

"Jean," "Jimmy," Stephanie Sinclair, Jennifer Bergstrom, Meagan Harris, Nina Cordes, Kevin Hanson, Adria Iwasutiak, Amy Prentice, Loretta Eldridge, Sarah St. Pierre, David Winter, Lea Antigny, Martha Sharpe, Chris Garnham, Kenny Anderton, Sjn, METZ.

Everyone at Simon & Schuster Canada, Scout Press, and Text Publishing.

My friends. My family.

Thank you.

IAIN REID is the author of two critically acclaimed, award-winning books of nonfiction: One Bird"s Choice and The Truth About Luck, which was selected by The Globe and Mail as one of the best books of 2013. Reid"s essays, articles, and reviews have appeared in a variety of publications throughout North America. In 2015, he was the recipient of the prestigious RBC Taylor Emerging Writer Award. Reid is a graduate of Queen"s University, where he studied history, English literature, and philosophy. I"m Thinking of Ending Things is his first novel.

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