know. Yet I scrutinize him more closely. A man has to learn something in so many years, I think. He cannot be the beast that he was. He smiles at my thought;
"The form changes, the essence remains the same," he says. "That is something Krishna told me about nature. But for us the form does not change."
"It is because we are unnatural."
"Yes. Nature abhors the invader. We are not welcome in this world."
"But you look well."
"I am not. I am tired. I wish to die."
"I don't," I say.
"I know."
"You tested me with Slim and his people. To see how hard I would fight."
"Yes."
"But I passed the test. I don't want to die. Leave here. Go do what you must. I want nothing to do with it."
Yaksha shakes his head sadly, and that is one change in him--his sorrow. It softens him somehow, making his eyes less cold. Yet the sorrow scares me more than his wicked glee used to. Yaksha was always so full of life for a being that would later be labeled the undead.
"I would let you go if I could," he says. "But I cannot."
"Because of the vow you took with Krishna?"
"Yes."
"What were his words?"
"He told me that I would have his grace if I destroyed the evil I had created."
"I suspected as much. Why didn't you destroy me?"
"There was time, at least in my mind. He did not put a time limit on me."
"You destroyed the others centuries ago."
He watches me. "You are very beautiful."
"Thank you."
"It warmed my heart to know your beauty still existed somewhere in the world." He pauses. "Why do you ask these questions? You know I didn't kill you because I love you."
"Do you still love me?"
"Of course."
"Then let me go."
"I cannot. I am sorry, Sita, truly."
"Is it so important to you that you die in his grace?"
Yaksha is grave. "It is why I came into this world. The Aghoran priest did not call me, I came of my own will. I knew Krishna was here. I came to get away from where I was. I came so that when I died I would be in that grace."
"But you tried to destroy Krishna?"
Yaksha shrugs as if that is not important. "The foolishness of youth."
"Was he God? Are you sure? Can we be sure?"
Yaksha shakes his head. "Even that does not matter. What is God? It is a word. Whatever Krishna was we both know he was not someone we can disobey. It is that simple."
I gesture to the waves. "Then the line has been drawn. The sea meets the shore. The infinite tells the finite what is supposed to be. I accept that. But you are faced with a problem. You do not know what Krishna said to me."
"I do. I have watched you long. The truth is obvious. He told you not to make another of your kind, and he would protect you."
"Yes. It is a paradox. If you try to destroy me, you will go against his word. If you do not try, then you are damned."
Yaksha is not moved by my words. He is a step ahead of me; he always was. He points to the house with his flute. Ray continues to stand beside the window, watching us.
"I have watched you particularly close the last three days," he says. "You love this boy. You would not want to see him die."
My fear is a great and terrible thing in this moment. But I speak harshly. "If you use that as a threat to force me to destroy myself, then you will still lose Krishna's grace. It will be as if you struck me down with your own hands."
Yaksha does not respond with anger. Indeed, he does seem weary. "You misunderstand me. I will do nothing to you while you are protected by his grace. I will force you to do nothing." He gestures to the setting sun, "It takes a night to make a vampire. I am sure you remember. When the sun rises again, I will come back for you, for both of you. By then you should be done. Then you will be mine."
There is scorn in my voice. "You are a fool, Yaksha. The temptation to make another of our kind has come to me many times in the long years, and always I have resisted it. I will not forsake my protection. Face it, you are beaten. Die and return to the black hell from where you came."
Yaksha raises an eyebrow. "You know I