What’s Up With the Ending?

The novel ends with Bella and Edward at an "impasse" – they're in a disagreement, and neither is budging. It's a deadlock.

Let's take a step back and think about what has happened. First of all, the obvious: Edward’s warnings to Bella have proven true. She does get hurt because of her involvement with him (if she hadn't been with Edward, James wouldn't have considered her to be an exciting human to hunt). And Edward would rather leave Bella than see her hurt because of him. In the hospital, Bella panics when she realizes that he's "trying to talk himself into leaving [her]" (24.185).

Second, Edward is determined for Bella to remain human. When the evil vampire James bit Bella, without intervention, Bella would have naturally become a vampire herself. Yet Edward wouldn't allow it. To save her human life, he risked losing control and killing her in order to suck the venomous blood out of her veins.

Third, Bella has become 100% devoted to Edward at this point. She nails her feelings when she says, “You are my life. You are the only thing it would hurt me to lose” (24.203). By the novel’s close, she’s determined to become a vampire.

What does this all mean? Well, it means something has to give. We've got a set of incompatible circumstances on our hands, and in order for Edward and Bella's relationship to work out, there needs to be some kind of change. Bella knows a change is coming soon. In the last scene of the novel Edward says, “I will stay with you – isn’t that enough?” and she replies, “Enough for now” (Epilogue.204). In other words, the "impasse" can't go on for too much longer.

In fact, we've seen this sort of "inter-species love affair" before, and in every case, if the lovers want to stay together, one of them needs to change to be like the other. Here are a few familiar examples:

  • The Little Mermaid: You know the story – Ariel is a mermaid and Prince Eric is human. She can only live in the water; he can only survive on land. In order for their relationship to work out, Ariel's dad turns her into a human, so she can be with Eric.

  • The Lord of the Rings: Aragorn, a human man, and Arwen, an elf maiden, are in love. They face a similar problem to Bella and Edward in that Aragorn is mortal and Arwen is immortal. In order to be with Aragorn, Arwen gives up her immortality and life as an elf.

  • Beauty and the Beast: Twilight has serious echoes of Beauty and the Beast – you've got the human maiden Belle and she's in love with a beast. Sound familiar? The way their relationship works is for the Beast to become a human man.

  • X-Men: The romance between Rogue and Bobby develops throughout the X-Men movies. While they're not different species per se (they are both mutant humans), they face an incompatible situation: Rogue is dangerous (kind of like Edward) – she kills anyone she touches. How can she and Bobby have a full relationship if they can't physically touch? In the end, Rogue takes an antidote to "cure" her mutant genes and becomes a regular human.

  • Shrek: The ogre Shrek and the human princess Fiona fall in love, but things can't really work out between them until it turns out that Fiona is an ogre as well.
Based on these examples, we're left to assume that either Edward needs to miraculously become human again, or Bella has to become a vampire. Or they need to break up. Alice Cullen has seen a vision of a possible future in which Bella becomes a vampire, and Bella tells Edward, "I'm betting on Alice" [being right] (24.288). Who are you betting on: Alice or Edward?