We Were Here: A New Adult Romance Prequel to Geoducks Are for Lovers (Modern Love Stories Book 1)
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Praise for We Were Here
“Daisy Prescott’s We Were Here is a brilliant, nostalgic, emotional journey that takes you back to a time when all the firsts in life meant something—and set the course for journeys unknown. You’ll have a ‘book hangover’ long after reading this funny, poignant story.”—New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Julia Kent
“This story has it all! Just like a mix tape; we get a dose of steamy romance, angsty ballads and sweet love songs woven together in a compelling, heartwarming and sometimes heart-wrenching journey of self-exploration.”—New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Helena Hunting
“We Were Here takes the characters we met in Geoducks and gives us their individual backstories in such a clever, engaging, emotional way. Set in the early 90’s, Prescott shares with us the tender, driven, hilarious, heart filled and hard college experiences.”—Erika, Goodreads Reviewer
We Were Here
Copyright © Daisy Prescott 2016, All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages for review purposes.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ISBN: 978–0-9864177–4-0
First Digital Edition February 2016
Cover Design by:
©Sarah Hansen, Okay Creations
Front Cover Photo by:
©DavidTB/Shutterstock
Editing by:
Melissa Ringsted, There for You Editing
Proofreading by:
Marla Esposito, Proofing with Style
Interior Design and Formatting by:
Christine Borgford, Perfectly Publishable
Modern Love Stories:
We Were Here
Geoducks Are for Lovers
Purchase from Amazon
Missionary Position
Purchase from Amazon
Happily Ever Now (Winter 2017)
WINGMEN SERIES:
Ready to Fall
Purchase from Amazon
Confessions of a Reformed Tom Cat
Purchase from Amazon
Wingman #3 (Summer 2016)
Modern Love Story Shorts:
Take Two
Purchase from Amazon
Take the Cake
Purchase from Amazon
Take for Granted
Purchase from Amazon
Take it Easy
Purchase from Amazon
Give and Take
Purchase from Amazon
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Table of Contents
We Were Here
Also by Daisy Prescott
Prologue
MAGGIE
One
Two
Three
Four
SELAH
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
BEN
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
JO
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-One
Twenty-Two
Twenty-Three
Twenty-Four
Twenty-Five
Twenty-Six
GIL
Twenty-Seven
Twenty-Eight
Twenty-Nine
Thirty
Thirty-One
Thirty-Two
LIZZY
Thirty-Three
Thirty-Four
Thirty-Five
Thirty-Six
Thirty-Seven
Thirty-Eight
QUINN
Thirty-Nine
Forty
Forty-One
Forty-Two
Forty-Three
Forty-Four
Forty-Five
Forty-Six
Forty-Seven
Epilogue
A Note from Daisy Prescott
Acknowledgments
About Daisy
In the 90s . . .
texting involved paper and a pen . . .
. . . our selfies were Polaroids . . .
. . . our favorite music was on mix tapes.
Sex was dangerous, music was raw, and falling in love felt nostalgic.
We were friends and lovers.
We thought we knew everything.
We knew nothing.
We were here.
Set in the early 1990s, a time before the internet, social media, and smart phones, We Were Here is the prequel to Geoducks Are For Lovers. This book can be read as a standalone.
To Neil Diamond:
Thanks for all the memories.
“The past is never dead. It’s not even past.” William Faulkner
“Don’t You Forget About Me” ~ Simple Minds
Lizzy
“DID OWEN INVITE you to the screening?” Quinn drops his backpack next to Maggie’s chair.
We’re sitting around our table in the dining hall in Evergreen’s student union, aka the college activities building everyone simply calls the CAB. Thursdays are the only day our schedules align for lunch this quarter. Typically, we take advantage of the time to catch up and plan for the weekend.
Before I can protest, Quinn steals half of my sandwich and has most of it stuffed in his mouth in a single bite.
“He did. I think he got us all.” Maggie swats his hand away from her Diet Coke.
“Are we going?” Jo leans in front of Ben to see the rest of the group, but he barely notices because his head’s stuck in a finance book. He’s studying for business school non-stop these days even though he’s already been accepted to Harvard.
“Do we have to? I’m not sure I’m ready to see my freshman self again. It’s too soon.” Selah’s hair has changed more than anything else over the past four years. Currently, it’s in a shaggy, punk rock pixie cut.
“We promised when we signed up we’d see it through to the bitter, bitter end.” Quinn grins at her scowl.
“We were freshmen when we agreed to be filmed every year for his documentary. I was barely eighteen and hadn’t voted in a presidential election yet. I believe that means I wasn’t an adult, and therefore incapable of giving consent.” Maggie picks at her salad.
“Come on, guys, think of how fun this will be. Our lives and friendships captured on VHS for eternity. Owen could become the next Spielberg and we’ll all end up in the Smithsonian.” Quinn’s blue eyes dance with dreams of fame and notoriety.
“What’s going to be fun?” Gil sits down at the far end of the table. Maggie’s glance flicks over to him for a second, then returns to her salad plate.
“Owen’s documentary is showing tonight,” Jo explains.
“The one we started as freshmen?” Gil shakes his head. “No way. Lived it. Don’t need to watch it.”
“Really?” Maggie focuses her attention on him.
“Don’t you remember my glasses?” He draws large circles around his eyes.
“Didn’t you have a mullet, too?” Selah runs her hand over his dark shoulder-lengt
h hair. He’s the poster boy for grunge music in his thrift store cardigan and faded Levis. Today’s shirt is one of those old golf shirts with the little penguin over his heart. I remember my dad wearing them.
He leans away to escape her petting. “It was an awkward period all around. You try growing out your hair and not have a mullet at some point.”
“I’m not taking no for an answer. We’re all going. We’re almost done with college. The time for nostalgia and reminiscing is upon us. These are the days . . .” Quinn sings the last sentence, and we all groan.
“I’ll go.” Ben finally joins the conversation. “We all should go. Quinn’s right. It’s the end of an era. We’ll never be this young and stupid again. We might as well enjoy it while we can.”
“Ben speaks.” Quinn pats him on the back. “Okay, we’ll meet outside the theater at seven-thirty sharp.”
“The documentary doesn’t start until eight.” Selah pulls the invitation out of her satchel and points at the time.
“I know, dear, but some of us are always late.” He nods toward Maggie.
Maggie glares at him. “I’m not always late.”
“Okay, Caterpillar.”
“You mean the White Rabbit. Quit mixing your metaphors.” Selah corrects him.
I smile at the use of her nickname from our first year.
It’s highly probable I might be the only one looking forward to seeing our friendships and lives as they evolved over the past four years. The same good-hearted bickering that’s seen us through countless dramas, failed love affairs, growing pains, and endless nights talking continues around the table.
With graduation a few weeks away, I’m trying to capture every moment and save them away for later. Who knows where our lives will take us or what fate has in store for us in the future. I want to stay in the present for as long as possible.
“I say we go to Lucky’s before the screening for reinforcements.” My suggestion is met with semi-enthusiastic agreement around the table. Jo volunteers Ben to buy a round to make up for always being boring lately. This earns her a high five from Quinn, and a grumble from Ben.
Lucky’s is really a bar in Olympia called The Four Leaf Clover. Quinn renamed it freshman year when they stopped carding on a regular basis.
After wrapping the remainder of my giant chocolate chip cookie in my napkin, I stuff it in my bag. “Lucky’s at seven. Nostalgia at eight.”
Most of the senior class mills around outside the theater. After grabbing snacks, we find a row of seats in the center. Quinn sits in the middle, hogging his huge bucket of popcorn with extra butter.
Owen stands at the front of the theater in a green corduroy jacket and Buddy Holly style glasses. “Four years ago, we began our journey of self-discovery at college.”
“Is this going to be the feel good version of the Gettysburg Address? Four score and—”
Jo cuts off Quinn by placing her hand over his mouth. “Shh.”
“Every quarter, I interviewed a handful of my fellow students. I asked them the same set of questions. These are our stories. Yours. Ours. Our collective history. These are our lives.”
“Like sands through—” This time Selah stuffs a handful of popcorn in Quinn’s mouth to silence him.
“Of course I had to edit this film down from its original six hours . . .” Owen drones on.
“Six hours?” Ben moves to stand, but Jo holds him back with her hand on his arm.
“ . . . I think you’ll find the final ninety-minute version captures the universal human coming of age journey into adulthood.”
“Is he for real?” Maggie asks.
“Shh,” we all shush her.
“Enjoy!” Owen finally finishes his speech to a smattering of applause.
“Why didn’t we bring a flask?” Jo mumbles and eats some of Quinn’s popcorn.
“Who said we didn’t?” Quinn holds out his large soda. “Careful. It’s a little strong.”
We pass the spiked soda down the row and back as the lights dim and our lives flash before us on the big screen.
Maggie Marrion, 18
French Literature
Freshman (Freshwoman? Freshperson? First year?)
What’s your first memory of college?
Feeling anything was possible.
Freedom.
Oh, you mean literally?
Meeting the people who would become my closest friends. I can’t imagine college or life without them.
“We Belong” ~Pat Benatar
MY FIRST WEEK of college at Evergreen was a blur. Parental drop-off. Meeting my new roommate Jennifer. Getting used to co-ed dorms. Adjusting to having classes at random times and not a straight schedule through from morning to afternoon. Since I had three hours between classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays, I decided I should find a job to fill the time.
Which was how I found myself spending an afternoon at the library, interviewing with the circulation desk manager. He wore a tie with a cardigan. Most of my professors so far hadn’t even worn ties.
After being quizzed about the Dewey Decimal system, and failing, I returned to my room in shame. At this rate, if I wanted to work on campus, I’d be washing dishes in the dining hall. Nothing could be grosser than the used food and unclean dishes of thousands of college students. I gagged at the thought as I opened our door.
Inside, Jennifer—my perfectly nice and perfectly normal roommate—was straddling a guy on my desk chair, making out.
She might have been trying to eat his face. I couldn’t really tell in the two seconds I stared at them before clamping my eyes shut. I know I spied her tongue. Outside of her mouth. All I could see of him were his dark hair, long legs, and brown Wallabee boots.
Panicked about interrupting something, and simultaneously feeling like a prude, I backed my way through the open door. After it quietly clicked close, I pressed my head against the cool metal.
I could go back to the library, except I left there ten minutes ago. The dorm lounge was an option, but this time of day meant it would be filled with some random club. I couldn’t remember if Thursday’s meeting was German Lovers or Save the Geoducks—our school mascot. Neither appealed to me.
I stared harder at the painted metal, wishing the make-out session on the other side would end sooner rather than later.
“Are you locked out?” The blond guy from down the hall rested his head on the bulletin board next to my room. “Or are you praying?”
Pressing my cheek on the door, I twisted to see him more clearly.
“It’s okay if you are. Pray if you’ve got to.”
“I’m not. Just thinking.”
A loud moan sounded from inside the room. “Oh, oh, oh God.”
“Sounds like someone in there is praying.” His lips curled into a smile. “You might want to step away, lest someone think you’re a pervert for eavesdropping.”
I jumped away from the door. “I wasn’t listening!”
Chuckling, he held up his hands in defense. “Not judging you. Praying and voyeurism both have their places, usually in Madonna videos.”
Another not so soft groan carried from my room. I took a step farther away. My favorite black on black Swatch showed the time as four o’clock. Too early to go to dinner. Looks like I’ll be going to the lounge after all.
“You want to come hang out in my room until they finish whatever they’re doing in there?” His offer sounded genuine and his smile was more than friendly. He gestured over his shoulder to the open door across the hall and down a few rooms. “I can promise you my roommate isn’t in there making out with anyone. We should be safe.”
“Okay.” I followed him into his room. Weird, abstract, colorful art prints decorated one wall above a messy bed with black and white graphic sheets. The other side had a big poster of skiing in Colorado; Star Wars sheets covered the bed. Both sides were cluttered, but not biohazard boy gross.
“Guess which side is mine.” My new friend leaned against one of the matching desks.r />
I studied him. He wore faded Levis and a Depeche Mode concert T-shirt. His blond hair was shaggy and wild. Paint splatters covered his well-worn Vans and his jeans. And his arms. Paint dotted everything.
“You’re the colorful side.” I pointed to his bed. “Not the nerd.”
“The girl wins a prize. I’m Quinn Dayton, by the way.”
I realized we skipped introductions and went right to discussing his bed. “I’m Maggie Marrion, the praying pervert.”
“Hi, Maggie. Have a seat.” He gestured around the room with a sweeping motion. “Probably best not to sit on that bed.”
I sat in the same desk chair being occupied in my room. Unlike Quinn’s desk, this one had neatly stacked books, a new Macintosh computer, a pile of floppy discs, and pens lined up in a row.
“Don’t let the nerdy sheets and computer fool you, Gil’s a cool guy.”
“Your roommate’s name is Will?” I must have misheard him.
“No, Gil like the fish.”
I furrowed my brows. “He’s named after a fish gill?”
“No, it’s Gilliam.”
“Gilliam.” I nodded as if in agreement. Okay. He seemed like a nice, normal enough guy who probably liked to ski, loved Star Wars, had his own computer, and was neat about his pens.
“So, Maggie, tell me your life story.”
I blinked, trying to think of something clever to say about myself. “Well, um, I . . . hmm.”
“Sounds fascinating so far. You want a soda?” He moved toward the little dorm fridge tucked in the corner.
“Sure.”
“Pepsi, Coke, or Blue Soda?”
“What’s blue soda?”
“It’s a soda that’s blue. Flavor is under discussion.” He held up a short glass bottle of bright blue, fizzy liquid.
“I’ll have a Coke. Diet if you have it.”