Starts at the very beginning, but things are different this time.

I am not Stephenie Meyer (although I wish I was) and i do not own any of these characters (even though i really really wish I did)

I walked into Forks High School for the first time and the size of it terrified me. Not because it was big, but because it was so small!

I had spent the previous few years of my life living in Phoenix. A massive city with an equally massive school. But here they would be lucky to have at least a thousand pupils.

I was bound to stand out.

My first few classes went fine, the teachers seemed pretty cool, and I started to recognise more people. When I entered the cafeteria a boy from my english class waved me over, apparently I've made a friend i though to myself as i crossed to sit wth his group. As i sat down i realised that almost all of the people at his table had been in at least one of my classes already, including a girl who i'd sat with in both trig and spanish.

Throught out lunch i tried my hardest to remember the names of my newly acquanted friends; Angela, Jessica, Eric, Lauren and Mike but i was still having difficulty.

That was when i first saw them.

They sat in the corner of the cafeteria as far from everyone else as possible. Each one of the had a lunch tray piled with untouched food, and the thing that caught my attention the most was how stunningly beautiful they all were.

Each one of the five beautiful teenagers had snow white skin, and flawless features, and the types of body that would make any model cry.

There were two girls; one was very small with short, pixie like, black hair and keen eyes; the other looked like a goddess with long curly blonde hair and a devastatingly amazing figure.

Then there were three boys; the first was very large, but not in the fat sense, just massively muscley; the second guy had honey blond hair and was very tall and lanky; and the third, who looked slightly younger, was bronze haired, and staring straight at me!

I drew in a deep breath and straight away, I knew who they were.