Bertha Haines's mood couldn't settle for a long time.
The story between her and Amos Smith felt different when she read it herself compared to hearing it from others.
Through her own words, she could clearly feel her intense and deep love for Amos Smith.
It turned out she used to like him so much.
And it was precisely because she liked him too much that she couldn't accept his deception, making the breakup inevitable.
Her biological mother said that they got back together after breaking up.
Kerr said that after the breakup, Amos Smith persistently pestered her, along with threats and intimidation, and it was with Clare Lewis's help that she managed to successfully escape from Amos Smith.
But the diary only recorded up to their breakup; the direction of the story afterward couldn't be judged merely by their few words in this love triangle.
Perhaps it was because of what she thought during the day that she dreamed at night; in the evening, she indeed dreamed of Amos Smith.
