Part VI - The Untimely Downfall of Strangers
Harryās POV
THEN - Day 1169
I felt my knuckles hit her door three times--one for the day that I loved her, two for the day I knew it, and three for the day I knew it was over. It felt like I was floating, like time was simply a figment of my imagination and like the words weād said over the last few years had somehow ended up in a trash bin down the street.
She opened the door to her hotel room--the one that sheād gotten for herself because, for some reason, she couldnāt bear to be close to me. Her eyes looked sad and her shoulders looked slumped, the look on her face told me more than her words ever could.
Something was terribly wrong with her--something was hurting her and putting distance between us faster than I could even realize it was happening. She wasnāt the person Iād met at the end of the summer three years back. But now it felt like I didnāt really know who she was.
I had tried to ask her--beg her, really--to tell me. To talk to me. To yell at me. Anything felt better than the silence that ensued every time I tried to hold her hand or kiss her forehead. Anything would have sounded better than hearing the words āIām fineā come out of her mouth.
She didnāt say anything--she looked up at me with her big blue eyes and the dark hair that usually draped around her face. It was pulled up behind her head, the sleeves of the sweatshirt she wore came down past her hands. She stepped aside, silently ushering me into her clean and ordered room.
The first few steps felt awkward. Where did I go? What did I say? Was there anything I could do? I doubted she had the answers, but the questions pulsed through me anyway. Margot made her way over to the couch and sat. I realized, as I waited for her to speak, that I was angry.
I was mad that sheād let it get this bad, mad that sheād waited this long to tell me that something was wrong, that this wasnāt working, that she didnāt love me. Thatās how it seemed, at least.
It felt like a century passed--she looked at the ground and then at me and then at the ground again. I watched her silently, like I so often did, and wondered what was on her mind.
āYou canāt do this, can you?ā I asked, my voice low and pained and hesitant.
She watched me for a second--frozen as if she hadnāt expected me to cut right to it. But she had to understand, weād been avoiding reality for months. Weād danced around the actual issue and shoved it deeper and deeper down. We acted like we were as happy as the magazines portrayed--like we were as energized and relaxed and thrilled as we looked on TV.
When she shook her head I had to look away, simply out of fear that the emotion in my eyes would come across as pathetic.
āSo thatās it?ā I asked, my arms crossed over my chest, likely sending the message that I was mad rather than upset. āWeāre just quitting--no reason, no explanation? Just because youāre--ā I stopped. I knew the word would make her angry, I knew sheād disagree, I knew it would start a fight. It always did.
āIām what?ā She challenged quickly, her eyes seemed to darken.
I decided to say it anyway. āYouāre sick.ā
āIām not sick,ā she shot back.
I rolled my eyes, which probably only poured more fuel on the fire. She wasnāt sick, maybe not physically. But mentally, emotionally, something was off. It was gradual, really. it wasnāt like she woke up one day and something had changed. It grew inside of her, feeding off of whatever dark thoughts she had, waiting to take over her and waiting to strike whenever it could.
I didnāt know if you call it depression or mental illness or what--but whatever it was took my girlfriend and turned her into someone I wish I could save.
Sheād told me early on that sometimes she felt nervous, upset, but she couldnāt quite place her finger on it. She told me that years of being on TV and years of being on stage would do that--but I didnāt quite believe her. I watched her go from being angry backstage at me for a miscommunication about my flight to smiling on a jumbotron as if nothing had happened.
I saw her choke back tears and just get on with it because she had a responsibility to her fans, to her team, to me, to herself. And after seven years of that you get tired. I understood. I only lasted five.
So, was she sick in a way that most people would understand? No.
āYou wonāt accept help,ā I clarified.
āI donāt need it.ā
āYes, Margot. You do.ā
She stared at me for a minute--her eyes seemed to search and process the words Iād said. She looked scared and angry and sad all at once, and I wish I knew what to say. I wish I could just tell her I loved her, but that didnāt seem to do it anymore.
She sat like that for a second, staring off into space. She looked like she wasnāt all there, like the usual smile and color in her eyes had faded and been buried deep behind the sadness she carried.
Maybe I couldnāt make her love me--maybe I couldnāt make her take care of herself, but I could say how I felt. If I couldnāt help her and love her enough to get rid of the sadness, the least I could do was help her realize that she wasnāt herself.
I walked to stand next to her, keeping my eyes on her face. āYou can leave me, and you can end this,ā I paused, feeling extremely disconnected from the words I was saying. Ā āBut you need to get help. Okay?ā
She didnāt look up, she didnāt even flinch. I think sheād gotten so used to tuning me out--tuning everyone out--that my words fluttered past her like a meaningless sound.
āOkay.ā
I let out a breath, wondering how on earth Iād gone from thinking this was the girl Iād marry to wondering who she even was. At 18 she was the girl who made me feel like my heart was going to beat out of my chest. At 19 she was the person who listened to me cry on the phone when we were oceans apart. At 20 she was the one who understood my pain. But now, at 21, she was a cold statue that took two steps away for every one step I took towards her.
I was angry--I was mad at her for letting it be like this, but I was also mad at myself. I wish I could have done something sooner, I wish I could have helped, known the right thing to say, or even just said one word that made her feel somewhat whole.
āIām sorry,ā I said, and she finally lifted her eyes to meet mine, but it only lasted for a second. I didnāt know what I was sorry for--maybe for the fact that I couldnāt try any harder than I already was. I swallowed the tears that stung my eyes. āI love you, yāknow.ā She nodded. She knew that.
I was hopeful for a second--hopeful that sheād say it back. Hopeful that Iād wake up from this nightmare and hopeful that we could undo the past. But I knew it was too good to be true. All hope had been lost.
āSay something,ā I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
Her eyes were empty when they met mine once again, she forced a small smile. āHarry,ā she said my name in a sigh. āI think you should go.ā
The words cracked me open, all the breath left my body at once as if sheād stolen the life right out of me. In a way, I guess, she had. I waited for a second, hoping sheād say something more. Hoping sheād change her mind. I knew I couldnāt force her hand.
I nodded in response to her silence--Iād grown used to it. I licked my lips, the taste of the salt on my cheeks reminded me that this was real. I didnāt know what to do, my feet didnāt know how to move, but I knew they had to. I leaned down and pressed a kiss to her forehead. She didnāt even move.
THEN - Day 1225
My fingers plunked down on the piano, playing the same chord Iād been playing for the last three minutes. There was nothing there.
It was moments like these where I wondered what she was doing. I wondered where she was, how she felt, what she thought. Niall had tried to tell me a few things that sheād said to him--he always seemed to tow the line of loyalty. He should have been loyal to me, but I knew heād choose her first. She was the sister he never had.
I knew she went somewhere. I knew she spent a month somewhere. Rehab--Niall had said. āRehab for what?ā Iād asked. He simply shrugged his shoulders and raised his eyebrows. āDunno--beinā so sad, I guess.ā
That was what I wanted--I wanted her to go somewhere and get the therapy and the help she needed. I didnāt know theyād call it rehab--I could almost imagine her rolling her eyes when she heard that.
The leaves on the trees outside seemed to turn inside out, which someone in the village had told me was a sign that a thunderstorm was coming. I wished it would--it almost felt like itād wash away my feelings with it.
Iād never really been depressed. Sure, a few heart breaks in school and whatnot, and this was probably nothing compared to how Margot seemed to feel every day, but I was thankful for the fact that the people I was with--the people pulling me together enough to make an album--seemed to understand.
At first I thought it was too soon. I tried to write in London and nothing came out. I tried to strum a few chords or plunk a few notes, but the well was dry. So I decided I needed a change of scenery. I heard Jamaica was nice in the summer.
The warmth was nice, the beach was nice. The alcohol that we drank daily took a little bit of the sting away from the inevitable thoughts that led back to the beginning and back to the middle and back to the end. The thoughts always led back to her.
The d-sharp sounded boring to my ears. I sang over it quietly anyway. āMaybe one day youāll call me.ā Just the one phrase was enough to stir emotion in me so strong that I had to blink it out of my eyes. I pushed myself back from the piano--the legs of the bed scratched against the floor.
I guess I knew it was coming. That seemed to be what people asked me most--my mother, my sister, my friends. They all wanted to know if I knew it would happen and why I didnāt try to do anything more.
But what was I supposed to do? What on earth would have made her tell me that she wasnāt okay? I asked and I begged and I pleaded and I cried but she would smile and lie to my face and for some reason my love wasnāt enough. Maybe it wouldnāt ever be.
At first I wondered if I should call her. I wondered what to say and how to tell her I still cared. But a few weeks went by, then a few months. Iād stare at my phone and wish that it would ring, wish that sheād be the one to reach out first. I never had the balls to press the familiar buttons and dial the familiar number. Now it was four months later and reaching out felt cold and distant and strange.
Maybe one day sheād call me. Maybe she would have something to say. Maybe one day she would say she was sorry. It seemed so unrealistic, but I could hope. Maybe.
NOW - DAY 1694
I was sat with Jeff in my living room. Heād offered to have me come to his office--some kind of air-conditioned room in a building in downtown L.A.--but I felt too freaked out to leave my house. He sat opposite me on the couch, his phone in the air as he stared down at the screen.
āI mean, Iām just going to be honest. Itās just Sinead, itās not Margot herself.ā
āI know,ā I said quietly, my eyes still focusing on the framed photo of me and my dad on the end table. I figured I owed it to her to let her know it was coming. Not that sheād ever done the same for me.
I knew sheād get phone calls and interview requests and I knew what type of a media shit storm it would be for her. I figured it was the right thing to do to let her know what to expect. Thatās what my mum said.
I mean, it felt weird. How did you reach out to someone you hadnāt spoken to in eighteen months and say āhey, I donāt know if you care, but I wrote a whole album about you and how mad I am at you. Do you want to hear it?ā
Iād said that to Jeff, Iād told him how weird it felt and how I didnāt even really know if it was the right move. So weād start with just one, he said. Weād send one song, see what she said, see how it went, and take it from there.
Jeff cleared his throat as he typed. āHey Sinead. Iām here with Harry and he wanted me to send along this song for Margot to hear. Itās coming out tomorrow. Jeff.ā
I brought my eyes to his--he was patiently watching me, waiting to see if Iād approve. I nodded, watched as his thumb hit the send button, and then I closed my eyes.
I had no idea what sheād think. I had no idea how sheād feel. I had ten songs that sheād hear and think about and most of them made her sound like a twat. That wasnāt necessarily my intention, at first, hey, write what you feel, they say.
Each song had a bit of our story in one way or another. The story that Iād retold so many times. The story that Iād written and talked about and cried over. That story wasnāt going to be just ours anymore.
Iād thought for a long time about it. When I first started writing I was really just processing. I was thinking and feeling and recounting all of the things that had happened and how they made me feel. But they became more real, more polished, and we started to piece together a few that seemed to stick together, a few that told the story and somehow made the sadness not as bad.
It felt like if I couldnāt have her, at least I could have a story in the form of a melody. Ten songs that seemed to tell everything from beginning to end, ten songs that made it not hurt as much.
I didnāt know if sheād even respond. Sinead might reply and let me know sheād pass it along. I had no clue what to expect and it seemed like having no expectations was probably for the better.
Iād spent the majority of the time since she left being a strange mix of angry and hurt. There were days when I wished I could call her up and scream at her--days I wished I could tell her how mean and selfish and shitty sheād been. Then there were days when I wished I could hold her and tell her weād be alright.
āIāll let you know as soon as someone responds,ā Jeff offered, his tone was quiet and cautious, as if he knew the door heād just opened.
THEN - Day 1
Being new to L.A. and the media and the circus of it all was exciting, but getting asked to do a guest appearance on a popular TV show with Margot Jones had me somewhat nervous.
Iād made the mistake of telling Louis and Liam that I found Margot to be quite fit--and being teenagers, they naturally felt it necessary to try to embarrass me as much as they could. Being on set at a TV show was new to us--we stayed in line and did what we were told. Most of the time.
Margot was a pro. She memorized lines in seconds and didnāt seem to make many mistakes. She was friendly with the director and the PAs and she even seemed to get along with the writers. She was funny and loud and she was prettier in person than she was in magazines.
Maybe some of my attraction to her was the initial infatuation with America--her accent and her smile and the way that she laughed so loud you could hear it down the hallway. Maybe it was because we were young and stupid and hormonal. Maybe it was the purple shirt they had her in for our first scene together.
Her younger sister was a self-proclaimed huge fan, and a part of me worried that Margot would see us as just that: the boys from the pop songs her little sister played in the car. When her sister somehow managed to get us invited for dinner, I made an executive call for the entire band and decided we would attend. I couldnāt miss a chance to spend more time with her.
I was intrigued by the girl with dark hair and a warm smile, intrigued by the fact that sheād won three Grammys at the age of 17, and I was intrigued by the way she didnāt seem to care that I was just as famous as she was--well, almost.
Her brother was nice and her step dad made a mean burger. Her mom made a summer salad and Margot talked about the way the leaves changed in the fall where she grew up. She plucked at the blades of grass beneath her as we sat on the edge of her driveway.
The setting sun cast a glow over the energetic backyard--Louis tossed the basketball towards the hoop, missing terribly.
I would have married her then.
THEN - Day 1145
I almost didnāt know if it was worth it. Iād told her before--Iād told her that she needed a break, Iād told her that she wasnāt doing well. I told her she needed to tell me what was going on. But here, with the dazed look on her face and the sound of distance in her voice, I only worried that confrontational words would push her farther away from me.
So I didnāt address it.
That seemed to be the pattern we were in. It seemed like the whole world knew she wasnāt okay--the whole world knew she was sick. Sad. Depressed. Anxious. Tired. Angry. Bored. Everyone knew that something was off--but no one seemed to do anything about it.
I felt like I was trapped in a nightmare--one where I was invisible and no one could hear what I was saying. I felt like I was trying to point out the obvious, but no one took it seriously.
Our album was set for release in less than a month, Iād do promo and radio slots and talk shows. Iād be busy and on the road and sheād probably continue to waste away--the sunshine that used to be housed in her eyes was mostly a distant memory.
She sat in the living room of her parentsā house, the house I came to that first night, the house where we spent last Christmas, the house where we first had sex. Her knees were pulled up to her chest and she was quiet--which wasnāt really new.
Maya was on the couch, too. Her curly hair fell down around her shoulders, a stark contrast to her sisterās straight hair.
I looked between to the two of them--secretly hoping that Maya could feel the tension too. Maybe sheād say something, maybe Margot would take it more seriously if it came from her sixteen year old kid sister.
āCan we find something else to watch?ā Maya asked, her thumbs typing wildly at her phone, she didnāt bother to look up. Margot, who was deep in thought, handed the remote to her sister and didnāt even blink.
From my spot opposite them--in the big brown armchair that Margot had gotten her mum for her birthday two years back--I watched as Maya took the remote, dropped her phone to her lap, and failed to recognize that something was terribly wrong.
I sat there, watching her and studying her, which she always said she hated. A girl who had cameras shoved in her face for the last eight years hated being watched--it made sense. But she had to understand--the more she kept from me, the less she spoke and the more secrets she had, the more Iād want to know. The more Iād ask and the more Iād wonder.
We eventually went to bed, climbing onto the mattress where sheād told me she loved me for the first time, and she finally let me touch her. She let me wrap my arms around her, and when she started to cry, the shaking of her chest against mine, the wetness of her tears on my shirt, I tried to ask why.
And that was when I realized that maybe she didnāt know.
NOW - Day 1694
I was home by myself when Jeff forwarded me the email. It wasnāt from Sinead. It wasnāt meant for Jeff. It was Margotās email, her words, typed on my screen, no opening or salutation or anything formal. Just Margot.
Itās beautiful, I love it.
Jeff hadnāt sent along any words either, no remark on her short reply or what he thought of it. He simply forwarded the message--didnāt text, didnāt call. And now, here I sat, at the kitchen counter of a lonely house I bought from a business friend in Agoura Hills.
Iād heated up the leftovers I had from dinner last night, but the food tasted bland in my mouth now that Iād gotten a response.
Feelings stirred inside of me, feelings I couldnāt quite place or name or understand. It was heat, really. Heat in my chest and in my stomach and in my heart and certainly in my head. Maybe I didnāt think she would reply, maybe I didnāt think sheād listen to the song I wrote about what it felt like to be in love with her.
But suddenly, quickly, it was anger. It was anger in my bones and in my eyes as they started to well. It was anger when I dropped my fork against the granite counter, anger when I swallowed the tasteless food, but it wasnāt anger when I thumbed a direct response from my email this time.
Marg,
Glad you like it. Album comes out in two weeks. I think itād be best if you hear it.
H.
I waited an hour for a response. I paced the living room and watched through the big glass windows as the rain trickled down the side of the house. Eventually she said sheād listen. I sent an email with the attachments and shut off my phone.
THEN - Day 10
I was afraid to date her at first. She was more famous than I felt like I could imagine. I knew her name before I was in the band and my sister had once read something about her net worth being over eighty million. I couldnāt even comprehend that.
But the Margot I knew and had lunch with and who liked to go to drive through fast food restaurants just for a soda--she wasnāt intimidating. She wasnāt the girl I thought she was when I walked through the doors of the studio that first morning. She wasnāt the girl on billboards and on the internet. She was a girl who seemed to swear as much as Niall and she could arguably out eat him as well.
The first time I kissed her was awkward. Mostly because it was on the couch in her living room--her brother was in the other room and her sister had gone to bed. Her parents were upstairs, too--apparently after headlining four tours, Margot had earned their trust to spend time alone with a lanky British kid.
She seemed hesitant but excited and pulled away from me with a smile on her face so wide that it looked like it hurt. The swell in my chest was unimaginable.
āI like you,ā I said quietly--my voice barely above a whisper. We were under a blanket, the air conditioning in her big house seemed to combat the California heat quite well. She stared at me for a second, took a deep breath, and then smiled.
āI like you, too.ā
Thatās when I knew it was going to hurt.
NOW - Day 1695
Iād been off of the treadmill for no more than four seconds when my phone rang in the cup holder. Iād woken up at 4:30am, a knot in my stomach that seemed too big to ignore had my feet heading towards the kitchen to make some coffee. Now, at nearly 6:30, the only thing that felt like it would help was running another six miles.
Her name on my screen made it feel like the world stopped. My heartbeat was suddenly loud in my ears--the same contact picture Iād had for four years stared back at me through the glass. She had a bright pink One Direction t-shirt on. She had both thumbs up by her sides, a cheesy grin on her face. She was stood somewhere in a venue in St. Louis, I think.
Why was she calling me so early? Why was she awake?
āHello?ā I spoke into the phone, the sweat on my gray t-shirt made me thankful for a home gym.
She didnāt speak--it was just silence. I hoped to God that she didnāt mistakenly call me. I hoped this was real.
āMarg--yāthere?ā
āHi, yeah, sorry, hi.ā She said finally, her voice more a sigh than anything else. I would have asked her how she was, what she was doing awake so early, but she launched straight in.
āI listened--to the album. Itās great. I just wanted to let you know that--ā another pause.
Did she hate it? Was she angry? Was I too forward in sending it and did she think I was a dick because I was mad at her?
āI liked it.ā Her voice was hesitant, but she sounded sincere.
āDid you?ā I asked quickly, clearing my throat to disguise any anxiety I was having. āMāglad, thank you, māglad you listened to it.ā
A few moments of silence passed. I wondered where she was--at her momās? Somewhere else? Was she even in L.A.? It felt too soon to ask.
I wondered if she was bothered by the way I told our story--I wondered if she cared about the fact that now people would know more details than they had before. A part of me didnāt care what she thought--a part of me just wanted to tell the truth. Or, at least, my version of it.
I wasnāt stupid enough to think that Margot didnāt have her own version to tell. I wasnāt stupid enough to think that she didnāt have her own story that replayed in her head when she dialed my number or when she listened to those songs.
I wished I could have watched her hear them. I didnāt know what to say, and really, I sort of wondered if sheād hung up. āWould you want to get coffee?ā I asked quickly, the words feeling strange and foreign in my mouth.
Silence.
āSure,ā She said suddenly, the word longer than it usually was, as if she were still somewhat reluctant. āAre you in L.A.?ā
I nodded, catching my reflection in the mirror on the wall. āI am. Been here since January actually--I, uh, I didnāt want to reach out until the album was done.ā
It was true--Iād thought a million times about seeing her. I wondered what would happen if I showed up at her momās house--I wondered what would happen if I went āround Sineadās. I almost wondered if sheād left L.A. altogether, she used to say she dreamed about moving back East when this was all over.
I never knew what she meant when she said āthis.ā
āCould you be at Geoffreyās at one?ā She asked quickly, pulling me back to the room.
The place where we met for coffee the first week we knew each other. Weād gone maybe ten times in the three years we dates. I hadnāt been back since. āIn Malibu? Sure, yes, yeah. I--Iāll see you then.ā
āOkay. Iāll see you then.ā
THEN - Day 1171
I hadnāt really slept and I hadnāt really eaten--which seemed to piss Liam off more than the fact that Iād pretty much gone mute. But what was there to say?
Here I was--supposed to be happy and excited for the release of the album, the upcoming hiatus, the fact that my life was pretty fucking good. But how was I supposed to be happy when she left as if it didnāt even hurt?
I had no idea where she was. I left her hotel room after it happened and walked three blocks in New York before someone recognized me. Then I went back to my hotel room and stared out the window until it was midnight.
Then I walked twenty six blocks before security found me after Niall checked Find My Friends.
Her hotel room was four doors down from mine. It was shut, locked, silent. Maybe she left.
Liam had begged me to eat some breakfast--I swallowed a bit of toast with the aid of some tea. But it immediately felt like it was going to come back up. I think the rest of them were just as shocked, but even more clueless as to what to do than I was.
I hadnāt seen it coming--I knew something was wrong. I knew she needed help. I had no idea that she wouldnāt want me to be a part of her life. She went from the girl who drunkenly told me she wanted to have my children to being someone with so much sadness in her I couldnāt do a thing to make her smile.
She didnāt even pick good timing. Right before the album released, right before I had to do a shit ton of promotion and appearances. Niall had tried to call her to find out where she was--her phone was off.
I think thatās what made me even more mad--she didnāt tell anyone. She left in the dead of night, no warning, no explanation. She left like she never even existed at all.
THEN - DAY 1304
I liked alone time--that was something new. I used to love to be with people, I always wanted friends around. I wanted to smile and laugh and feel connected to people I cared about.
Jamaica was quiet, though, and something about sitting by the pool at night--the air still warm and the water even warmer--felt tranquil.
The sounds of the night bugs and tree frogs sometimes floated up through my bedroom window--but out here I could hear them much more clearly.
Maybe it was the stark contrast of the noise Iād grown accustomed to--London, planes, crowds, concert speakers, people asking me where it all went wrong every time I stepped outside. But the quiet sounds of Jamaica felt like a safe place to stay--at least for a while.
I hadnāt spoken to her. I hadnāt heard from her. I hadnāt had any contact with anyone in her family or her circle of friends. I almost called in December when Niall said she went to rehab, but I didnāt know what to say. I wanted her to have the space she claimed she needed.
And now, April was upon me and I was on an Island with a smaller population than people who followed me on twitter. Something about that made made me want to cry.
Itād been awhile since I cried about it. I think I cried for the first three days straight, but then promo took over, then the album was out, we were in front of cameras and behind microphones. I didnāt have the time or the space or the energy, truthfully. The last six months of our relationship had drained me so much that I didnāt have a lot left.
Maybe it was all the writing--maybe the lyrics and the sounds and the fact that I thought about her every single day made the water come so readily to my eyes. Maybe the fact that Iād finally written the song brought a sense of deep pain than had been lying dormant in me for quite some time.
It took five months. I knew it was somewhere inside of me--I knew the lyrics would come eventually in a way that I could handle. Every time I sat down and tried to really get it out, it was too much. I was too angry, too sad, too annoyed. Too emotionless. Until today.
Because today, after five months, I finally figured out what I wanted the song to be.
Every time Iāve broken up with someone, which, granted, hasnāt been that much, thereās a song. Just one. You might write ten or twenty or thirty, but there was always just one that seemed to really capture the feeling. Margot and I used to talk about it. Thereās one song--the one that feels more familiar than any of the others. The one that really hits you in the gut and knocks the wind out of you and leaves you somewhat speechless.
I knew I found it when I woke up with someone else in my bed this morning--someone who wasnāt Margot, someone who wasnāt the girl with long brown hair and sweet blue eyes and a smile that was contagious. I knew I needed to write it when her name almost floated out of my mouth, caught in my throat when the sleeping girl from a resort downtown shifted in my sheets.
I was surprised that I hadnāt drunkenly called Margot--based on the amount of alcohol Iād consumed the night before. But I guess--for now, finding a girl who resembled her in the dark was good enough.


















