A witch's love is, in a sense, extremely pure, sincere, and passionate feelings, but what she desires can only be obtained through complex and evil witchcraft, scheming emotional games, and bodily flattery. This is undoubtedly a sad irony.
The last thing I understood was that the witch had intended to capture the sheriff with rhetoric, sensuality, and hallucinogenic liquor as usual, but when the sheriff met the witch with a sober, sleepy, unspeakable look, the witch felt Fear and withdrawal: She may understand that at this moment, the man in front of her will not be fooled by her own small tricks, and all her witchcraft and spiritual power are ineffective against this man. She can't control him, their love has strayed from the track she expected, so she is terrified, even more afraid that this uncertainty will one day destroy the purest and perfect love she imagined - she killed him , and blissfully immersed in the perfect ending of his own fantasy.
As for the sheriff, I think he really realized he was already in love when he was desperate to save the witch. Only then did he realize that he had the same destination as the love believers he had ridiculed.
But despite the thousands of turns, in the end, no one has the courage to face what they really want. Perhaps after the witch killed her lover, she smoked a cigarette and embarked on another journey to find the "real" lover of her dreams.
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