Liberty came out with a kettle and saw Duncan falling and getting up again from a distance, continuing to practice walking. She stopped and watched his persistence from a distance, but did not go closer, fearing that Duncan would be under great pressure.
She had seen him when he was in the most embarrassment, but no one liked to show their embarrassment to others all the time.
Duncan also wanted to save face.
When Duncan got tired, he wanted to sit back in the wheelchair, but he was too tired to stand up and there was no one around. Duncan crawled back to the wheelchair, grabbed the wheelchair, climbed back to his feet, sat back in the wheelchair, and gasped.
When Duncan was looking around, Liberty hurriedly hid behind a tree to prevent Duncan from noticing that she was already here.
Seeing Duncan crawling to the wheelchair and using the wheelchair to stand up, Liberty’s heart ached.
He would be like this, related to her.
He got into the car accident because he insisted on pursuing her, was unwilling to give up on her, and resisted his mother’s persecution.
It’s all because of her.
Duncan was the fourth young master of the Lewis family, born with a silver spoon in his mouth, a proud son of heaven, but because of her ending up like this, Liberty felt both distressed and blamed herself.
She was not the one who made Duncan like her and pursue her, but Duncan’s accident was indeed because of her.
She didn’t kill Boren, Boren died because of her.
Liberty’s eyes were moist. After a while, she wiped her eyes to calm down her emotions, and then she walked towards Duncan calmly holding the kettle as if nothing had happened.
“Mr. Lewis.”
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