Vampires were always seen as a myth ghost stories whispered to children to keep them from wandering too far at night. But in Mystic Falls, myths had a strange way of becoming reality.
And this is Candice Forbes’ story.
She was seventeen when she lost everything. The sound of a scream in the woods. Crimson spilling across white snow. Her mother’s hand slipping from her grasp. The night her parents were murdered in what the police called an animal attack.
That was a year ago.
Now, Candice was just trying to survive breathing through the ache, pretending that the nightmares didn’t claw at her every time she closed her eyes.
She worked long hours at The Mystic Grill, a small-town restaurant in the heart of Mystic Falls. The place smelled of coffee, grilled onions, and nostalgia like time itself refused to move on.
Maybe that’s why Candice stayed.
She cleaned tables, refilled cups, and wore a smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes. Her co-workers joked that she was the “kindest girl in town,” but kindness had turned into armor something she wore to hide the cracks in her soul.
Every night, when the clock struck midnight, the nightmares returned. She would wake up drenched in sweat, hearing the echo of screeching tires and her mother’s last breath.
So she volunteered for every night shift she could get. Sleep was the enemy. Work was the distraction.
That evening, as the clock ticked past eight, Candice wiped down the last table near the window. The street outside was quiet the kind of eerie quiet Mystic Falls was known for. A cold breeze slipped through the door just as it creaked open.
Someone walked in.
He was tall, light-skinned, his dark hair messy in the kind of way that looked deliberate. His eyes blue, sharp, and oddly calm locked with hers for a split second before drifting away. He carried something magnetic about him, something… ancient.
Candice froze for half a heartbeat. She’d seen handsome men before, but this one felt different.Like the kind of man who belonged to shadows, not sunlight.
He walked up to the counter with a quiet confidence, every movement deliberate, like he was aware of the effect he had on the world.
“Can I get a drink?” he asked, his voice deep and smooth, carrying that subtle charm that made the air feel heavier.
Candice blinked, realizing she’d been staring. “Y-yeah, of course. What would you like?”
“Coffee,” he said simply.
She nodded, turning away quickly, her hands trembling as she poured the drink. What was wrong with her? She’d served hundreds of customers, but none had ever made her heart beat this fast.
When she placed the mug in front of him, he looked up and for a moment, the world went quiet.
Those blue eyes met hers again, and she swore she felt a pulse of… something. Recognition? Fear? Desire? She couldn’t tell.
“You’re new in town,” she said softly, her voice unsure but polite.
“Is it that obvious?” he asked, a faint smile tugging at his lips.
She shrugged, pretending to wipe the counter to hide her blush. “Well, it’s Mystic Falls. Everyone here knows everyone. You don’t look like a local.”
“I’m not.” His tone was unreadable calm, but there was a shadow behind it.
She smiled awkwardly. “Passing through, then?”
“Maybe,” he said. “Or maybe I’m here for a reason.”
There was something about the way he said it like every word carried weight, like he was hiding something.
“So,” he said after a moment, reaching into his pocket, “how much for the coffee?”
“Five dollars, sir.”
He handed her a ten-dollar bill.
She frowned. “Uh, I think you made a mistake”
“No mistake,” he interrupted, his smile deepening as he stood. “Keep the change.”
Before she could respond, he turned toward the door.
“Thank you!” she called out instinctively.
He stopped for half a second, his back to her, then turned just enough to glance at her over his shoulder. That half-smile returned mysterious and haunting.
Then he was gone.
Candice let out a shaky breath, her heart racing for reasons she couldn’t explain.
Outside, Kai Donovan walked down the empty street, hands buried in his pockets.
“I need to get close to her,” he muttered under his breath. His voice was low, roughened by guilt. “Can she really be Caroline?”
He glanced back through the window, just in time to see Candice laughing with another waitress. For the first time in decades, something unfamiliar stirred in his chest.
Hope or maybe danger.
The next morning, Candice dragged herself home after another long night shift. The sky was pale and clouded, the streets still half asleep.
Her small house sat near the edge of town, tucked behind a row of old oak trees. It had been her parents’ home, and every creak in the floor still whispered their memories.
But today, something felt… off.
There was a car parked in front of her house. A sleek black one she didn’t recognize. Mystic Falls was small; new cars meant new people.
Candice’s steps slowed.
As she approached, the front door of the house next to hers opened. A man stepped out, tall and well-dressed, his dark hair gleaming under the morning light. He looked like he’d just stepped out of a fairy tale charming, graceful, dangerously handsome.
He turned slightly, and her breath caught.
It was him.
The man from the diner.
For a second, time stopped. His eyes met hers, and in that moment, she felt something strange like a memory trying to surface.
“Good morning,” he said, his voice carrying that same velvety calm that made her knees feel weak.
“Morning,” she managed to reply, clutching her bag a little tighter. “You’re… my new neighbor?”
He smiled faintly. “Looks like it.”
“What a coincidence,” she said nervously, forcing a laugh.
“I don’t believe in coincidences,” Kai said softly, watching her with an intensity that made her heart race. “I believe in fate.”
Candice blinked, unsure what to say. There was something in his tone a hint of danger wrapped in charm. She should’ve been afraid, but instead, she was intrigued.
“Well,” she said finally, trying to sound casual, “welcome to Mystic Falls.”
“Thank you,” he murmured. “I think I’m going to like it here.”
His smile didn’t reach his eyes.
That night, long after Candice had fallen asleep, Kai stood by his window, watching the light flicker through hers. His jaw tightened as an old memory clawed its way to the surface a night of screams, blood, and a terrified child running into the woods.
Her eyes.
He’d seen them before.
And the guilt that had haunted him for years now had a name.
Candice Forbes.
In mystic falls, monsters wear human faces.
And love can be deadlier than blood