I just want to say that I wouldn't mind if it takes a dozen more chapters to wrap things up -- the point isn't the ending, it's the journey, and what a journey. It's of heavenly length. I think that the Goat has really achieved a new level of work with this story, in which the meticulous research adds depth to the human dimensions, which come across as even more genuine and layered in this story than in his previous ones. Granted, the human development is primarily among the four: Trevor, Shane, Joel, and Lisa -- Bridget is less a character than a type. But there are some fine novels, like the Wooster and Jeeves novels of Wodehouse, in which one or two characters are fully realized as characters, by being surrounded by even major figures who are types. So take your time. Continue to let the characters breathe their own air. Don't take shortcuts. Work out your meticulous plot twists, but don't forget the breathtaking characterizations you've drawn for the primary characters. We haven't really heard the inner worlds of the four primary characters since the flight to the Falklands. I'm sure in the three months since, Trevor and Shane have really grown in each other's care, and Joel and Lisa have absorbed some transformative life experience they encountered in Australia. And thank you, thank you, for giving of your time, creativity, and humanity to craft such artistry and share it with us as a gift.