There's no such thing as "the end" of a black hole. Might as well ask what does yellow smell like.
Black holes aren't actually holes, they are an object so massive that its weight condenses into a single point and light cannot escape it making it appear to be a black void.
This is the correct answer.
Although as a side note, light doesn't
actually bend its course at a black hole due to the gravity force by itself (because that would imply angular velocity, which would imply acceleration, which would imply the velocity of light isn't constant). What's actually happening is that light still follows a straight path, but space itself is bending.
You can kind of picture it by marking two points A and B in a piece of paper and drawing a straight line from one to the other (the shortest path from A to B). Then bend the paper and look at the line. The line is still straight (well "straight" isn't really the right word here anymore - geodesic would be more appropriate - but you get the idea: it's still going the shortest path along the paper from A to B), but it looks curved because the shape of the paper changed.