#PublicLoveDeclaration
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Silver Springs | (famous!harry x famous!reader)
Summary: Falling for Harry Styles was never part of Y/Nâs plan. As the daughter of Stevie Nicks, sheâs spent her whole life running from the spotlight, carving out her own identity in the indie rock scene. But when fate keeps pulling her back into his orbit, resisting becomes impossible.
A slow-burn friends-to-lovers romance filled with stolen glances, whispered lyrics, and a love too big to keep secret forever. Featuring: a dramatic rain-soaked love confession, a very public grand gesture, and enough Fleetwood Mac references to make Stevie proud.
Because some love stories are meant to be legendary.
A/N: Okay, but why was this request everything Iâve ever wanted in a fic?? The slow burn?? The secret relationship angst?? The messy, desperate, I-canât-breathe-without-you love confession?? And letâs not even talk about that post-confession smut scene because I need a moment. To the lovely soul who requested this, thank you for feeding my drama-loving heart. This was so much fun to write, and I definitely got way too emotionally attached. (Also, I need a rockstar AU in real life ASAP.) ALSO Iâm sorry, I definitely overdid the scene dividers oops.
Word Count: 8,5k
Warnings:Â
Slow-burn tension that hurts (but in a good way)
Secret relationship chaos
One rain-soaked love confession
One hot, messy, emotional SMUT scene (18+)
Paparazzi stress & PR nightmares
A duet so romantic it might ruin your standards
Fleetwood Mac lyrics used as emotional warfare
â â
⎠â
â
Y/N had been born with the weight of a legacy she never asked for.
From the moment she took her first breath, the world had already decided who she was. The daughter of Stevie Nicks. Rock royalty. A ghost of the past in a modern world. The media had never let her be anything else. They picked apart her features, searching for traces of her motherâthe same high cheekbones, the same wild hair. They hunted for echoes of Fleetwood Mac in the songs she wrote, dissecting every lyric, every melody, desperate to find a connection. And when they couldnât?
They made one up.
Her fatherâs identity had been a secret from the start, a mystery wrapped in whispered rumors and unanswered questions. Some tabloids swore he had been a rockstar, a fleeting love affair lost in the haze of the â70s. Others speculated he had been someone ordinary, someone her mother had chosen to protect from the chaos of her world. Y/N had stopped wondering a long time ago. Her mother had always said, "You donât need to know where you come from to know where youâre going, baby." And maybe that was true. But sometimes, when she looked at herself in the mirror, she wished she knew which parts of her belonged to Stevie Nicks and which belonged to a stranger.
Still, despite the worldâs obsession with her past, Y/N had built something of her own.
Her music was raw, poeticâa fusion of indie rock and dreamlike lyricism that belonged entirely to her. She wasnât interested in stadiums or radio hits; she wanted songs that lingered in the bones, the kind that made people ache without knowing why.
And yet, no matter what she did, the headlines always found a way to reduce her to a footnote in her motherâs story.
"Stevie Nicksâ Daughter Haunts the Music SceneâCan She Ever Escape Her Motherâs Shadow?" "The Princess of Rock ânâ Roll: Y/N Nicks Inherits a Legacy of Magic and Tragedy."
She ignored them. Mostly.
But some nights, when the whiskey burned too much and the music wasnât enough, she wondered if sheâd ever just be herself.
The first time Y/N met Harry Styles, she was fifteen.
It was a warm summer night in Los Angeles, the kind where the air was thick with nostalgia, humming with the remnants of a golden era long gone.
Fleetwood Mac was playing at The Forum, and backstage was a haze of cigarette smoke, laughter, and the scent of aged leather. It was a world Y/N had always known, one that felt like home and yet never quite belonged to her.
She had been curled up on one of the velvet couches, her combat boots propped up on a glass table, flipping through an old notebook of half-written lyrics.
Her mother had walked in then, a force of nature even in her sixties, wrapped in flowing black fabric, rings glinting under the dim lights. And beside herâ
Harry.
He had been twenty, freshly cut from the boyband machine but still unmistakably him. Messy curls, dimples carved deep into his cheeks, a floral button-up that hung loose over his chest. There was an ease to him, a confidence that most people his age hadnât yet earned.
Stevie had smiled, her voice all warmth and amusement as she introduced them.
"Harry, this is my daughter, Y/N. Y/N, sweetheart, this is Harry Styles."
Y/N had barely spared him a glance, disinterested in the way only a fifteen-year-old girl could be.
She had looked him up and down, unimpressed, before muttering, "Oh. Youâre the boy with the hair."
There had been a beat of silence. Thenâ
Harry had grinned, wide and unbothered. "And youâre the girl who hates the spotlight."
That had made her pause.
She had finally looked at him properly then, taking in the twinkle of mischief in his green eyes, the way he had spoken to her like he knew her, like he could already see the edges of her soul.
She had hated that.
So she had rolled her eyes, shutting her notebook with a snap. "Yeah? What gave it away?"
Harry had only chuckled. "Just a feeling."
They hadnât known it then, but that momentâthat first careless exchange in the glow of The Forumâs dressing roomsâhad been the beginning of something that would follow them for years.
They had drifted in and out of each otherâs lives after that, their paths crossing at industry events, in backstage corridors, in places where music and fame blurred the lines between strangers and something more.
But they had never been close.
Not yet.
That would come later.
And when it did, neither of them would be able to stop it.
It was a city built on illusions, a place where the past and present blurred under neon lights and whiskey-soaked conversations. People changed here, or they lost themselves trying.
Y/N had spent years learning how to exist in the industry without letting it consume her. She had built walls, wrapped herself in the armor of cigarette smoke and sharp words, refusing to let the world shape her into something she wasnât.
But some nightsânights like thisâshe felt the weight of it all pressing against her ribs.
She had been in the music industry long enough to know that these parties werenât really about music. They were about power. Influence. The quiet, calculated dance of networking, where every glance and every handshake meant something.
Y/N hated it.
And yet, here she was.
The party was in the Hollywood Hills, tucked away in a mansion that reeked of old money and new fame. The kind of place where people got too drunk on tequila and promises they wouldnât remember in the morning.
She had come because she had toâbecause being seen mattered, even when she wished it didnât.
She was twenty-five now, no longer the sharp-tongued teenager who had met Harry Styles in the glow of The Forumâs dressing rooms.
She had grown into herself.
And so had he.
She saw him before he saw her.
Harry was in the center of the room, as he always was, laughter spilling from his lips as he leaned against a marble bar, his rings catching in the dim light.
He looked different nowâolder, surer, carved out of something stronger.
The curls were shorter, but still wild. The tattoos more visible, inked stories along his skin. He wore a suit, something sleek and expensive, but the top buttons of his shirt were undone, revealing a silver cross against his collarbones.
Even here, surrounded by actors and musicians and people who pretended they belonged, he was the only one who looked like he truly did.
Y/N had spent years pretending she was immune to the charm of men like him.
But as she stood there, watching the way he moved, the way people gravitated toward him, she felt something stir in her chest.
Something she didnât want to name.
She turned away, heading toward the bar, but it was already too late.
She heard his voice before she felt his presence.
âWell, if it isnât rock royalty.â
Y/N exhaled, bracing herself, before turning to face him.
Harry was smiling, that slow, lazy grin that had made girls weak in the knees for over a decade.
âPop star,â she greeted, raising an eyebrow.
His dimples deepened. âDidnât think this was your scene.â
Y/N shrugged, lifting her whiskey glass. âIt isnât.â
Harryâs gaze flickered over her, assessing. âThen why are you here?â
âSame reason you are,â she said, taking a slow sip. âTo remind people we still exist.â
Harry chuckled, shaking his head. âYou donât have to remind anyone, love. They never forget a Nicks.â
There was something in the way he said itâsomething almost⌠knowing.
She tilted her head, watching him. âAnd they never forget a Styles.â
His smirk deepened. âTouchĂŠ.â
The conversation between them felt effortless, the kind of back-and-forth that came with years of shared history, even if most of it had been from a distance.
She had always liked that about him.
That he could meet her wit for wit. That he never backed down.
That night, they danced around the past without ever acknowledging it, teasing each other between sips of whiskey and stolen glances.
He called her "rock princess" like it was a private joke.
She called him "pop star" with just enough mockery to make him laugh.
The undercurrent of something more was thereâtangible, electric, waiting to be acknowledged.
But neither of them touched it.
Not yet.
Later, when the party had thinned and the air inside had grown heavy with heat and smoke, Y/N slipped outside.
She kicked off her heels, stepping onto the cool stone of the balcony, and lit a cigarette with steady fingers.
The view of the city stretched before her, a glittering sea of headlights and broken dreams.
She inhaled deeply, letting the nicotine settle in her lungs, humming a familiar melody under her breathâone of her motherâs, an old Fleetwood Mac song that had been stitched into her bones long before she was born.
She didnât hear him approach.
Didnât realize he was there until he spoke.
âStill hate the spotlight?â
His voice was softer now, missing the teasing edge from before.
She exhaled, watching the smoke curl into the night. âI hate what it does to people.â
Harry leaned against the railing beside her, silent for a moment, as if turning over her words in his head.
Then, he huffed a quiet laugh. âStill the girl who hates everything?â
Y/N smirked, side-eyeing him. âStill the boy with the hair?â
Harry grinned, running a hand through his curls. âI like to think thereâs more to me than that.â
Something unspoken passed between them then.
A shift. A breath.
A moment on the edge of something inevitable.
Neither of them moved.
Neither of them said a word.
But in the silence, they both felt it.
A crack in the walls they had spent years building.
A spark that had always been there, waiting for the right time to catch fire.
Harry called her three weeks after the party.
It was lateâtoo late for anything that wasnât trouble.
She had been sprawled across her bed, an open notebook balanced on her stomach, trying to piece together a song that didnât want to be written, when her phone buzzed against the nightstand.
She didnât need to check the name.
There was only one person who would call her at this hour, as if he knew sheâd still be awake.
She let the phone ring twice before answering. âYou lost, pop star?â
Harry chuckled, his voice low and lazy. âNot lost, no. Just⌠thought of you.â
Y/N rolled onto her side, tucking the phone between her shoulder and ear. âOh? Should I be flattered?â
âDunno.â He paused. âWanna come to the studio tomorrow?â
That made her sit up.
She knew Harry was working on a new album. The industry had been buzzing about it for months, but he had been carefulâsecretive, evenâabout who he let in.
And now, he was inviting her.
Y/N hesitated for only a second before saying, âWhat time?â
She arrived at the studio the next evening, her guitar slung over her back, dressed in a well-worn Fleetwood Mac t-shirt just to mess with him.
Harry was already there, sitting on the edge of a couch with a notebook in his lap, his fingers tapping out a rhythm on the cover.
He looked up when she walked in, a slow smile spreading across his face. âDidnât think youâd actually show.â
Y/N dropped onto the couch beside him, stretching out like she owned the place. âDidnât think you actually had a studio. Thought you just wrote love songs in expensive hotel rooms.â
Harry chuckled, flipping the notebook shut. âMaybe I do both.â
The night unfolded in quiet moments and half-sung melodies.
She watched as he disappeared into the recording booth, slipping the headphones over his ears, eyes fluttering shut as the music took over.
And for the first time, she let herself really listen to him.
Harry had always been a good singer. That much was obvious. But there was something about watching him like thisâseeing the way he poured himself into every lyric, the way his voice carried a rawness that no amount of polish could hideâthat made her breath catch.
He was singing something new, something unfinished.
And as his voice curled around the notes, thick with longing and something unspoken, he looked upâstraight at her.
Y/Nâs grip tightened around her whiskey glass.
The boothâs glass separated them, but the way he stared at herâintense, knowing, like he could see straight through herâmade her feel like there was nothing between them at all.
She swallowed hard, looking away first.
Harry smirked.
One studio session turned into two. Two turned into three.
And then, before she knew it, she was on a plane with him, tucked into first-class seats as his tour swept across the country.
She told herself she was just tagging along for inspiration, a creative escape.
She told herself it didnât mean anything.
But the late nights in hotel rooms told a different story.
They fell into a rhythmâdrinking whiskey on balconies, trading lyrics like secrets, letting conversations slip into the kind of honesty that only existed between two people who didnât want to admit what they were to each other.
Some nights, they wrote.
Some nights, they just existedâstretched out on hotel carpets, hands brushing when they passed the bottle back and forth, staring at ceilings like they held the answers to questions neither of them wanted to ask.
She hadnât expected this.
Hadnât expected the way he looked at her when she wasnât paying attention.
Hadnât expected the way she wanted to memorize the shape of his laughter.
Hadnât expected the way she craved him, in the quiet, in the spaces between words, in the way his voice curled around her name like it was something sacred.
One night, she fell asleep in his hotel room.
They had been listening to records, the vinyl crackling in the background, the bottle of whiskey between them half-empty.
She had kicked off her boots at some point, curling up on the couch, his hoodie draped over her shoulders like she belonged in it.
Harry had been mid-sentence when he noticed she wasnât answering.
He turned, finding her tucked into the cushions, her breathing soft, her hair spilling across her face.
Something in his chest tightened.
He exhaled, rubbing a hand over his jaw, telling himself to let it go.
But he didnât.
Instead, he leaned in, brushing her hair behind her ear, his fingers lingering a second too long.
She stirred slightly but didnât wake.
And for the briefest moment, Harry let himself want itâlet himself imagine what it would feel like to close the space between them, to taste the whiskey on her lips, to see if sheâd kiss him back or push him away.
He hovered there, so close, so fucking closeâ
And then he pulled back.
Shoving a hand through his curls, he let out a quiet curse, grabbing the nearest blanket and draping it over her instead.
Not now, he told himself.
Not yet.
He sat back, forcing himself to look away.
But even in the dark, even in the silence, he knew.
He was already in too deep.
London was cold, the kind of damp chill that clung to bones and made her wish she was still waking up in different hotel rooms, still stealing sips of his morning coffee, still pretending she didnât care when he hummed her songs under his breath.
The withdrawal was annoying.
But not unexpected.
She had just finished scribbling notes for a new song when her phone rang.
âYou still in town?â
She smirked, setting her pen down. âDidnât know you missed me so much, pop star.â
Harry chuckled, that deep, lazy sound that made something twist in her stomach. âNot even denying it, are you?â
She rolled her eyes. âWhat do you want, Styles?â
âDinner.â
That made her pause.
Sure, they had spent weeks living in each otherâs pocketsâwhiskey-soaked late nights, studio sessions stretched into dawn, long looks across dimly lit dressing roomsâbut this felt⌠different.
Intentional.
Like he was asking for something neither of them were ready to name.
Still, she played it cool. âWhere?â
âIâll text you.â A pause. âWear something nice.â
She showed up to the restaurant in a leather jacket, ripped jeans, and her motherâs old silver rings.
Let him try and tell her what to wear.
Harry was already there, tucked into a quiet corner, a half-full glass of red wine in front of him. His curls were messier than usual, his sweater hanging loose on his frame, and the moment he saw her, his dimples deepened.
âVery fancy,â he teased, flicking the collar of her jacket as she slid into the seat across from him.
Y/N smirked. âIf you wanted a date, you shouldâve said so.â
Harryâs lips twitched. âDidnât say I didnât.â
The air shifted.
She ignored the way her pulse quickened, instead reaching for the menu. âSo. Whatâs good here?â
They fell into easy conversation, talking about the tour, the highs and lows, the stupid inside jokes theyâd collected along the way.
But somewhere between the laughter and the second glass of wine, the mood softened.
âDo you ever get tired of it?â she asked, twirling the stem of her glass between her fingers.
Harry tilted his head. âOf what?â
âBeing⌠this.â She gestured vaguely at him, at the world outside the restaurant doors, at the weight of fame that followed them both. âThe cameras, the expectations, the pressure. Do you ever just wanna disappear?â
Harry studied her, running his thumb along the rim of his glass.
âSometimes,â he admitted. âBut then I remember why I started. And itâs not about all the noise. Itâs about the music. AboutâŚâ He exhaled, shaking his head with a small smile. âAbout moments like this.â
Y/N felt her heart lurch before she could stop it.
She cleared her throat, forcing a smirk. âSappy.â
Harry grinned, leaning back in his chair. âYou love it.â
She did.
That was the problem.
They should have known better.
A quiet dinner in London? No such thing.
The next morning, the headlines were everywhere.
Harry Styles and Rock Royalty: A New Power Couple?
The Fleetwood Mac ConnectionâIs Y/N Following Her Motherâs Footsteps in Love, Too?
Spotted: Harry & Y/N, Cozy London Date Night or Just Old Friends?
Y/N groaned, tossing her phone onto the kitchen counter. âYouâve got to be kidding me.â
Harryâs name lit up her screen.
She answered without greeting. âTell me this will blow over.â
Harry chuckled. âItâll blow over.â
âYouâre lying.â
âI am.â Another laugh. âWe could deny it.â
âObviously.â
âOrâŚâ
Y/N narrowed her eyes. âOr?â
Harryâs grin was practically audible. âCould always lean into it.â
She snorted. âYou wish, Styles.â
He hummed. âYeah, maybe I do.â
Her stomach flipped.
Before she could respond, there was a knock on her door.
âGotta go.â She hung up quickly, shaking off the warmth curling in her chest.
Then she opened the door.
And found her mother standing there, arms crossed, eyebrows raised.
Y/N barely had a chance to step aside before Stevie breezed past her, silk scarves trailing, the scent of patchouli and incense filling the space.
She made a beeline for the kitchen, plucked Y/Nâs phone off the counter, and squinted at the headlines.
Y/N sighed. âGood morning to you, too.â
Stevie hummed, tapping a red-lacquered fingernail against the screen. âSo⌠you and Harry Styles.â
Y/N groaned. âFor fuckâs sake, itâs nothing.â
Stevie arched a delicate brow, taking a slow sip of her tea. âSure, baby. Keep telling yourself that.â
Y/N scowled. âItâs not love.â
Stevieâs lips curled into a knowing smile.
âLove is messy in this business, honey.â
Y/N rolled her eyes, snatching her phone back. âI wouldnât know.â
Stevie just laughed, something soft and far too smug in her gaze.
Because she knew.
Long before Y/N was willing to admit it to herself.
She spotted him immediately.
Harry.
Leaning against the marble bar, whiskey in hand, dimples out in full force as he laughed at something Lizzo said. He looked too good, annoyingly good, all effortless charm and understated power in his black suit, his sheer shirt open just enough to tease golden skin and the sharp edge of his collarbone.
Y/N swallowed hard.
It had been weeks since the headlines. Since her motherâs knowing smile. Since she had convinced herself she wasnât thinking about him like that.
But now, with the golden glow of the chandeliers casting shadows over his cheekbones, his green eyes flicking up to meet hers across the roomâshe felt it.
The pull. The inevitable, undeniable pull.
She found herself at his side before she could think better of it, sliding onto the barstool beside him.
Harry glanced at her, eyes flicking over her outfitâa silk slip dress in deep navy, barely-there straps, silver chains glinting against her collarbone. His throat bobbed as he swallowed, his fingers tightening around his whiskey glass.
Interesting.
Y/N smirked, plucking an olive from the garnish tray and popping it into her mouth. âEnjoying yourself, pop star?â
Harry exhaled a laugh, tilting his glass towards her. âWas just about to ask you the same thing, rock princess.â
She arched a brow. âYou clean up well.â
He leaned in slightly, voice dropping. âSo do you.â
Her breath hitched, but she masked it with a slow sip of her drink.
They fell into easy conversation, but the teasing was sharper tonight, laced with something dangerous. He was closer than usual, his knee brushing against hers, his fingers grazing the inside of her wrist when he reached for his drink.
And every time she laughed, his eyes flickered to her lips.
Sometime after midnight, when the party was loudest and the drinks were strongest, Y/N felt the walls closing in.
She had spent the last hour with his hand on the small of her back, his voice low in her ear, his eyes dark and unreadable whenever she so much as looked at someone else.
She couldnât take it anymore.
So she grabbed his wrist.
âCome with me.â
Harry blinked, surprised, but let her lead him through the crowd, up a grand staircase, and through a side door that led to the rooftop.
The city stretched out below them, glittering in the darkness. The muffled bass of the party throbbed beneath their feet, but up here, the air was crisp, cool against flushed skin.
Harry ran a hand through his curls, exhaling. âYâfinally had enough of all that?â
Y/N scoffed. âI just needed to breathe.â
A beat of silence. Thenâ
âYou think about it too, donât you?â
Her stomach clenched.
She turned to him, arms crossed. âThink about what?â
Harry took a step closer. âThis.â
Her heart hammered. âHarryââ
âI think about you too much,â he admitted, voice quiet but firm, like he had been holding it in for years.
The air crackled between them.
Y/Nâs nails bit into her palms. Her voice was steady when she said, âThen do something about it.â
Harry moved before she could take it back.
His hand found her jaw, fingers tilting her face up to his. He hesitated for a fraction of a second, his breath fanning against her lipsâgiving her a chance to stop it, to pull away.
She didnât.
So he kissed her.
Slow at first, teasing, like he wanted to savor the moment. His lips were soft but firm, tasting like whiskey and warmth, like something she hadnât realized she had been starving for.
And when she kissed him back, something inside him snapped.
A groan rumbled in his throat as he deepened it, his other hand sliding around her waist, pulling her flush against him. The cold rooftop wall pressed against her back, his body against her front, caging her in.
She melted.
Her fingers tangled in his curls, tugging just enough to make him growl into her mouth. She felt his smirk against her lips before he kissed her harder, licking into her mouth like he wanted to learn every single inch of her.
The city blurred around them.
There was only this.
Only him.
Only the moment they had spent years pretending they didnât want.
When they finally broke apart, Y/N was breathless, lips tingling, her hands still fisted in his hair.
Harry smirked, eyes dark and hazy.
âWas wondering when youâd let me do that.â
Y/N let out a breathless laugh, her fingers tracing his jaw.
âShut up and do it again.â
And so he did.
They didnât talk about it, not really.
They just acted.
And once that line had been crossed, there was no going back.
The secrecy of it all was intoxicating.
It turned the smallest moments into something electricâher fingers grazing his when she passed him a drink, the press of his palm against her lower back as he guided her through a crowd.
They stole kisses behind dressing room doors, in dimly lit hallways, in the backseat of a blacked-out SUV. It was a game neither of them acknowledged but both played with fervor.
It was thrilling.
It was dangerous.
It was them.
Harry had sent her nothing but a single text:
Room 1107. Doorâs open.
So she went.
The moment she stepped inside, he was already reaching for her.
His hands were warm as they slid around her waist, pulling her in. His lips found hers before she could even make a remark about his audacity, and suddenly she was backed up against the wall, gasping softly into his mouth as his fingers gripped the hem of her hoodieâthe one she had stolen from his suitcase weeks ago.
It smelled like him.
It felt like home.
âMissed you,â he muttered against her lips, his voice rough with exhaustion but laced with something softer, something sweeter.
She smirked, her fingers curling into his T-shirt. âYou saw me three hours ago.â
Harry hummed, dragging his lips down the column of her throat. âStill too long.â
She rolled her eyes, but the shiver down her spine betrayed her.
But sleep had other plans.
Y/N woke up tangled in crisp white sheets, her limbs a lazy sprawl across the mattress. The scent of Harryâcologne, whiskey, and something distinctly himâwrapped around her like a second skin.
And thenâ
A knock at the door.
Her eyes flew open.
Harry groaned into the pillow beside her. âFuckâs sake.â
âHarry? You up?â
His assistant.
Shit.
Y/N scrambled upright, heart racing. She barely had time to throw on his hoodie before Harry was tugging her off the bed, dragging her toward the closet.
âOh, you have to be kidding me,â she hissed.
He just grinned, pushing the door open. âGet in.â
âHarryââ
âIn, love.â
She barely had time to flip him off before he shut the door behind her, sealing her in darkness.
Y/N pressed a hand over her mouth to keep from laughing, crouched between his suitcases, her bare legs chilled by the cool air inside.
She could hear everything.
The door creaking open.
Harryâs voice, rough from sleep. âMorning.â
The assistantâs knowing tone. âYou sound like shit.â
A pause.
Y/N could feel the smirk in Harryâs response. âYeah, well. Long night.â
Her glare could have burned through the door.
From the other side, she heard rustlingâprobably his assistant rifling through a bag.
Thenâ
âOh, and by the way? If youâre gonna sneak someone in, maybe donât leave two pairs of shoes by the door next time.â
Silence.
Y/Nâs stomach dropped.
Harry, to his credit, barely missed a beat.
âRight. Yeah. Noted.â
The door shut a moment later.
She barely had time to breathe before the closet door swung open, revealing Harryâs smug, dimpled grin.
âNext time,â he murmured, offering his hand to pull her up, âyouâre hiding under the bed.â
Y/N smacked his chest.
And then kissed him.
It was meant to be quickâjust a press of lips in playful retaliationâbut Harry wasnât one to let a moment slip away. His fingers curled around her waist, holding her there, deepening the kiss. It was languid, familiar, the kind of kiss that tasted like late nights and secrets, like comfort and hunger all at once.
She sighed against his mouth. âI should go.â
âI know.â
Neither of them moved.
It was only when the morning light began creeping through the curtains, spilling over their tangled limbs, that she forced herself to untangle from him. Harry stayed in bed, arm draped over his forehead, watching as she slipped into her jeans and pulled on his hoodieâher own top lost somewhere in the haze of the night before.
His voice was hoarse from sleep. âAt least let me get you a car.â
âIâll call one,â she assured him, raking her fingers through her messy hair.
Harry sat up then, brows knitting together. âY/Nââ
âIâll be fine,â she interrupted, flashing him a small smile. She pressed a last kiss to his cheek, inhaled the warmth of his skin, and slipped out of the room.
And right into a camera flash.
The second she stepped onto the pavement, she knew.
The street wasnât exactly swarming, but one paparazzo was enough. He was already snapping rapid shots, the sound of the shutter slicing through the dawn stillness like a guillotine. She didnât runâthat would make it worse. Instead, she pulled up the hood of Harryâs sweatshirt, kept her chin down, and slid into the waiting car.
Her phone buzzed before she even reached her apartment.
Maddie: Shit. Have you seen TMZ??
Y/Nâs stomach twisted. She hadnât even shut the door behind her before she was pulling up the link.
The headline screamed at her in bold print:
Y/N Nicks Spotted Leaving Harry Stylesâ HomeâRock Royalty & Pop Prince?
Her pulse pounded as she scrolled. Dozens of pictures. Some from last night when they arrived separately at his house. Some from this morning, catching her in the same outfit.
And then the comments.
Not surprised. The tension in that interview was insane. Sheâs not even that famous wtf. Fleetwood Mac and One Direction crossover??? Didnât she date that bassist last year? Sheâs literally wearing his hoodie. ITâS HAPPENING. Harry can do better tbh.
Her fingers tightened around the phone.
She should have known.
By noon, it was everywhere. Entertainment news, gossip sites, even actual journalists weighing in on the implications of her and Harry. She ignored the notifications, silenced her phone, but then came the email from her publicist.
And worseâHarryâs PR team.
We need to get ahead of this. No comment is best for now. Weâre drafting a statement.
It was bullshit.
By mid-afternoon, she was at his house.
Harry was pacing the living room, phone in one hand, stress written all over his face. He looked up when she walked in, exhaling heavily. âThey want me to deny it.â
Y/Nâs breath caught. âWhat?â
âThey thinkââ He dragged a hand through his curls. âThey think we can ride it out, wait for something else to distract them. If we say nothing, it dies faster.â
Something bitter lodged itself in her throat. âSay nothing? Or lie?â
He hesitated. And that was enough.
âYou said we were in this together,â she said, voice sharp.
âWe are,â he insisted. âBut you know how this works, Y/N. Itâs different for me. The fans.â
Her laugh was hollow. âOh, the fans.â
âThatâs notââ He sighed, shaking his head. âYou know what I mean.â
âNo, Harry. I donât.â She crossed her arms. âBecause last I checked, Iâm in this industry too. Iâve had my entire existence scrutinized since birth. Do you think I donât know what itâs like to have people picking apart my every move?â
His jaw clenched.
She pressed on. âBut Iâm not ashamed of you. And I sure as hell donât want to pretend this isnât real just because some PR team is scared of a few bad headlines.â
âIâm not ashamed of you,â he said, voice low.
âThen why are you acting like you are?â
Silence.
Her heart hammered.
Finally, she exhaled shakily, voice barely above a whisper. âI want us to stop hiding. Please.â
He didnât say anything.
And maybe that was her answer.
Y/N swallowed the lump in her throat, nodded once, and turned for the door.
The quiet thud of the door closing behind her felt heavier than it should have.
It wasnât dramaticâno slamming, no storming out. Just the quiet finality of leaving.
And yet, it echoed.
She didnât cry in the car. Didnât cry when she got home. Didnât even cry when she scrolled through Twitter and saw her name still trending, the discourse evolving by the hour.
What does Harry see in her anyway? Sheâs just another nepotism baby. Sheâs so privateâdoes she think sheâs better than his other exes? Sheâs clearly using him for clout. Sheâs lucky to have him, but he deserves someone who actually appreciates him.
Her fingers hovered over the screen before she locked her phone and tossed it onto the couch.
Let them talk. Let them spin their stories. It wasnât like the truth mattered.
She went silent.
No Instagram stories, no late-night tweets, no cryptic lyrics. The press called it a calculated move, the fans called it suspicious, but in reality?
She just didnât have the energy.
She slept too little and drank too much coffee. She ignored calls from her publicist. Ignored texts from mutual friends who wanted to check in but were probably just fishing for an inside scoop.
And Harry?
Harry didnât reach out.
Not once.
Which, of all the things, hurt the most.
It had been three days.
She was at her motherâs house when it happened.
Stevie had always been able to tell when something was wrong, no matter how good Y/N thought she was at masking it. She hadnât pried, though. Not yet. Instead, she let Y/N exist in the space, offering quiet company rather than questions.
But Y/N knew she wouldnât escape forever.
That night, the house was quiet except for the hum of the wind outside. Stevie had gone to bed hours ago, leaving Y/N alone in the dimly lit living room, the grand piano standing in the corner like it was waiting for her.
She didnât even realize she was walking toward it until her fingers brushed against the keys.
She sat down.
And she played.
It started as muscle memory, the chords slipping out in a familiar pattern, soft and haunting. The kind of song that lingered in the bones, that carried the weight of something unfinished.
"You could be my silver spring..."
The words came out quieter than she intended, but they were there.
"Blue-green colors flashing..."
Her voice wavered.
"I would be your only dream..."
Her fingers trembled over the keys, the melody filling the empty room.
"You will never be my lover..."
The tears slipped down her cheeks before she could stop them.
God.
She hadnât cried. Not when the pictures leaked, not when the headlines turned ugly, not even when she walked away.
But here, under the weight of this songâher motherâs songâshe broke.
She barely heard the footsteps approaching behind her.
But she felt the presence.
A hand, warm and familiar, rested gently on her shoulder.
She didnât flinch. Didnât stop playing.
Stevie sat down beside her on the bench, saying nothing.
She just listened.
And when Y/Nâs hands finally fell away from the keys, when her head dropped forward and her shoulders shook with silent sobs, her mother reached out and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear.
"Oh, baby," she murmured softly.
And that was all it took for Y/N to shatter completely.
She turned into her motherâs arms, hiding her face against her shoulder as the heartbreak spilled out in ways she hadnât allowed before.
Stevie just held her.
She didnât say I told you so, didnât say you knew this would happen, didnât say I warned you, love is messy in this business.
She just let her cry.
Because what was there to say?
Y/N had been willing to fight for this. She had been willing to face the noise, the scrutiny, the world dissecting her every moveâfor him.
And he hadnât even reached for her when she walked away.
She had loved him. Had let herself believe, even just for a moment, that they could exist beyond the secrets, beyond the fear.
But maybe she had been wrong.
Maybe he was never hers to begin with.
Meanwhile...
Harry hadnât slept.
He had spent the last three days running on autopilot, going through the motions of studio sessions and meetings, pretending like everything was fine when it wasnât.
He had tried to tell himself that this was the right move. That letting the story die on its own was the best way to protect them both.
But nothing about this felt right.
He had checked his phone a hundred times, fingers hovering over her contact, but he never typed anything. What could he say? Sorry I didnât fight for us? Sorry I let the fear win?
He wasnât sure what finally pushed him over the edge. Maybe it was the lack of her name in his messages, the absence of her voice. Maybe it was the fact that he had spent years wanting her and only had days before she slipped away completely.
Or maybe it was the video.
It wasnât even a full clip, just a fifteen-second snippet someone had posted online.
Y/N, at a piano. Playing Silver Springs.
It was grainy, the lighting dim, but he knew her silhouette anywhere.
And he knew what that song meant.
His stomach dropped.
Because suddenly, it wasnât just the weight of the media or the PR teams or the fans that mattered.
It was her.
It had always been her.
And if he didnât move now, if he didnât do something, he was going to lose her for good.
The rain was relentless.
It hit the pavement in steady sheets, washing the city in silver streaks and the glow of streetlights. It soaked through Harryâs clothes, plastering his shirt to his skin, curling his hair against his forehead, dripping down his jaw like the storm itself was trying to pull him under.
But he didnât care.
His heart was hammering, his chest tight with something wild and desperate as he stood in front of her door, fist poised to knock.
This was it.
No more hiding. No more silence. No more pretending like he could live without her.
His knuckles hit the wood. Once. Twice.
Nothing.
He swallowed hard, knocking again, harder this time, rainwater slipping down his wrist.
Still nothing.
His stomach clenched. What if she wasnât here? What if she didnât want to be hereâwhat if she had already left, had already moved onâ
The door swung open.
And there she was.
She stood barefoot in the doorway, an oversized sweatshirt hanging off one shoulder, her hair damp, like sheâd just stepped out of the shower.
She hadnât been expecting him. That much was obvious.
Her eyes widened, lips parting slightly as she took him inâthe way his shirt clung to his chest, the way water dripped from his curls, the way his breath came ragged and uneven.
For a second, neither of them spoke.
Thenâ
âFuck the PR,â he blurted, voice raw. âFuck the headlines.â
She blinked.
âI love you.â
The words hit the air like a lightning strike, sharp and electric.
A breath. A pause. A crack in the silence.
The rain hadnât let up.
It streaked down the windowpanes, tapping a steady rhythm against the glass, pooling in the crevices of the street outside. The air smelled like wet pavement and something electric, something on the verge of breaking.
He stood there in her doorway, dripping onto the hardwood floors, soaked to the bone. His shirt clung to him, darkened by the rain, molded to the sharp lines of his chest and the ridges of his stomach. Water curled at his jaw, trailing down the hollow of his throat. His breaths were heavy, ragged, like heâd run here in the downpour, like nothing in the world had mattered more than making it to this moment.
And sheâ
She just stared.
Chest rising and falling, lips slightly parted, fingers trembling at her sides.
Silence stretched between them, thick and weighted, every unspoken word, every unshed tear, every almost hanging in the space between their bodies.
Her fingers fisted in the damp collar of his shirt.
She yanked him inside.
The door slammed behind them, but neither of them noticed.
His back hit the wood, a sharp inhale punched from his lungs as she pressed against him. Their bodies were a tangle of heat and desperation, a collision of limbs and longing, the storm outside nothing compared to the one building between them.
Her hands slid up, skimming over his shoulders, gripping the nape of his neck, pulling.
Their mouths crashed together.
It was rough. Messy. Clumsy in the way only something utterly inevitable could be.
Her nails scraped against his scalp, and he groaned into her mouth, his fingers threading into her damp hair, tugging just enough to tip her head back. His lips slanted over hers, deepening the kiss, tasting her like he was starved for it.
She gasped when his mouth trailed lower, down the curve of her jaw, the column of her throat. He bit down, just enough to leave a mark, just enough to make her shudder against him.
Her hands fumbled at the buttons of his shirt, but the fabric was stuck to him, refusing to give. Frustration twisted her features.
âOff,â she demanded, voice breathless, thick with need.
He barely pulled back long enough to shove the wet fabric off his shoulders, letting it drop to the floor with a damp slap.
She pressed her palms against his bare chest, feeling the warmth of his skin, the erratic beat of his heart beneath her touch.
Then, she leaned in, running her tongue over the rain-slicked skin at his throat.
His whole body tensed.
âJesus Christ,â he rasped.
Losing Control
They didnât make it far.
They stumbled through the flat, hands desperate, mouths never parting, breathing each other in like oxygen.
Her sweatshirt was the next casualty, pulled up and over her head, landing somewhere behind them. His hands were on her skin instantly, fingers tracing the delicate lines of her spine, dragging down, downâgripping the back of her thighs and hoisting her up.
She gasped against his lips, legs wrapping around his waist.
He walked them backward, moving blindly, guided only by instinct and the sound of her breathing, the little whimpers she made when he kissed the hollow of her throat, the way her hips shifted against him.
They hit the couch.
She was weightless for a moment, air rushing from her lungs as he dropped her onto the cushions, hovering above her, chest heaving.
His hands spread over her bare thighs, sliding up, up, until his fingers hooked into the waistband of her shorts. He glanced up, meeting her gaze.
âIâve wanted you since that first night,â he murmured, voice rough, wrecked.
Her breath caught.
A single heartbeat. A moment suspended in time.
Then she was tugging him down, capturing his mouth with hers.
Heat.
That was all she could feel.
The press of his body, the weight of him between her thighs, the scratch of his stubble against her skin as he kissed a path down her stomach.
Her nails raked down his back, catching at the waistband of his jeans, tugging. He groaned, the sound vibrating against her skin, his grip tightening on her hips as he pushed himself lower.
His lips ghosted over her navel, down further, untilâ
Her back arched, a sharp inhale punched from her lungs, a curse whispered into the air.
And then everything blurred.
A tangle of limbs, clothes stripped away piece by piece, moans swallowed in kisses, bodies moving together, frantic, unrestrained, the storm raging both outside and between them.
He pressed inside her with a shuddering breath, forehead dropping against hers, their hands gripping, clutching, desperate.
âLook at me,â he murmured, voice hoarse, raw with something deeper than lust.
She did.
And in that moment, it wasnât just sex.
It was everything.
They collapsed against each other, breathless, bodies tangled.
Her cheek rested against his chest, his fingers tracing lazy circles over her bare spine.
The rain pattered softly against the window, but all she could hear was the steady rhythm of his heartbeat.
For a long moment, neither of them spoke.
Then, quietlyâ
âYou didnât stop me from walking away.â
He exhaled, his lips brushing over her temple. âI wanted to.â
She glanced up at him. âThen why didnât you?â
His throat bobbed. âBecause you deserved more than that.â
Her heart ached.
She shifted, fingers trailing over his jaw, over the curve of his mouth. âAnd now?â
His hand tightened on her waist.
âIâm done running.â
She stared at him for a beat.
Then, slowly, she smiled.
And when she kissed him, soft and lingering, he knewâ
So was she.
The world could burn. The headlines could scream. The fans could theorize. The PR teams could scramble.
None of it mattered anymore.
Because they were done hiding.
They chose the timing.
They chose the words.
They chose each other.
The cameras were set up in a cozy, softly lit studio, with plush chairs and warm lighting that made everything feel a little less staged, a little more intimate. She sat beside him, their hands resting on the space between themânot quite touching, but close.
The interviewer, an older woman with kind eyes, smiled at them both.
âSo,â she began, âI think itâs safe to say the world has been dying to know. Whatâs the truth?â
Harry exhaled a soft laugh, shaking his head. He glanced at Y/N, his dimples peeking out as he grinned, then looked back at the camera.
âThe truth?â he repeated, voice playful, teasing.
She nudged him, a silent Behave.
He ignored it.
âYeah,â he said, shrugging like it was the easiest thing in the world. âIâm in love with her. Always have been.â
The interviewer made a sound of delight. The world outside exploded.
She turned to Y/N, who was smiling so wide her cheeks ached.
âAnd you?â the interviewer asked gently.
Y/N looked at Harry.
He was already looking at her.
âIâm in love with him too,â she murmured. âObviously.â
The arena was packed.
The energy in the air was electric, a chorus of cheers and music and flashing lights. The setlist was nearly done, the concert winding toward its final moments. But before the last song, Harry paused.
âAlright,â he murmured into the mic, stepping back from the center of the stage. âIâve got something special for you all tonight.â
The crowd roared.
His eyes found her, standing just offstage, watching him with an amused smile.
And thenâhe extended his hand.
She hesitated.
Not because she didnât want to. But because, for the first time, this wasnât just between them. This was in front of thousands.
He must have seen it in her eyes, because he smiledâsoft, reassuring, knowing. He wiggled his fingers, beckoning her.
âCâmon, love,â he said. âDuet?â
The audience screamed.
She laughed, shaking her head. âYouâre ridiculous,â she mouthed.
But she took his hand.
The moment she stepped onto the stage, the noise doubled, an eruption of cheers and chants and camera flashes.
But none of it mattered.
Not when he was looking at her like that.
The first chords of the song played, slow and sweet, the melody wrapping around them like something sacred.
And thenâ
He lifted her hand, pressing a kiss to her knuckles.
Soft.
Lingering.
Devoted.
The crowd melted.
But in that moment, as the lights bathed them in gold, as their voices wove together, as their fingers stayed entwinedâ
It wasnât about the world watching.
It was about them.
Because for once, it didnât matter who was looking.
They had each other.
â â
⎠â
â
Thank you so much for reading, youâre a total angel! Donât forget to like, comment, and reblog if you enjoyed! It means everything to me! đ
taglist: @oscahpastry @mema10 @angelbabyyy99 @iloveharrystyles04 @cinemharry @drwho06 @donutsandpalmtrees @panini @mads3502 @imgonnadreamaboutthewayyoutaaaa @one-sweet-gubler @rizosrizos26 @ciriceimpera @everyscarisahealingplace @hello-heyhi @sexymfharriet @lizsogolden @hannah9921 @chicabonitasblog @huhidontknowstuff @berrywoods1245 @jennovaaa @angeldavis777 @prettygurl-2009 @almostcontentcreator @run-for-the-hills @maudie-duan @dipmeinhoneyh @harrrrystylesslut @georgiarose94 @stylestarkey @watarmelon212 @hopefullimaginer123, @fangirl509east @bethiegurl19 @adoredeanna @secretisme4 @harry2121 @hopefullimaginer123 @fangirl509east @uncassettodiricordi @2601-london @zbaby @harryscherries28 @michellekstyles
#cloudyluun's original post#harry styles#harry styles fic#harry styles writing#harry styles x reader#harry styles fanfiction#harry styles imagine#harry styles x y/n#harry styles fluff#harry styles one shot#harry styles smut#HarryStylesFanfiction#FriendsToLovers#SlowBurnRomance#SecretRelationship#RockstarAU#FamousYN#EnemiesToLoversVibes#AngstWithAHappyEnding#MutualPining#ForbiddenLove#EmotionalRollercoaster#LoveConfessionInTheRain#MessyDesperateSmut#PublicLoveDeclaration#FleetwoodMacInspired#StevieNicksDaughter#HeartbreakScene#IndieRockPrincess#TensionAndTeasing
545 notes
¡
View notes