I think you still have the main and fill lights too low, and too far off to the side...it looks to me like you are cross-lighting these...I think you'd do better to move to a single main light and no fill light. I do not really see any harsh shadows...shadows show us shape...
The catchlights in her eyes seem too low to me...and I can see two lights reflected in the catchlights in her eyes, and both lights appear too low,and there seems to be no shadow under her nose...this is not quite what I want to see in a portrait. The main light needs to have a "direction", from where it is coming from....but the fill light being placed identically, or nearly so, on the opposite side, is canceling out the main light's shadow-creation effect. So...I say, try it with JUST the main light on her face, and if you want that hairlight effect, well, keep using that. But I would eliminate the fill light.
I think what you need to do is get the main light VERY close to her, and a bit higher, so the light kind of "rains down on her" from an angle...and the angle I am thinking of is with the light high enough so that the main light's catchlight shows up HIGH on the eyeball,well,well,well above the center-level of the eyeball, and somewhere between the 10 to 2 o'clock placement. Even with shadows, that oughtta look pretty good. Look for a shadow to be cast by the nose; a shadow that comes downward, and slightly off to the side of the bottom of the nose, and which does NOT touch her upper lip...that is a pretty traditional main light height, and one that looks natural, creates sparkly eyes, and looks good.
Problems like those you are having are pretty common when trying to learn how to light using speedlights, with NO modeling lights, and no on-site mentor, and basically, on your own by trial and error.