MADE
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Wendell Sweet
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
The ship's timbers groaned a mournful protest against the crushing embrace of the ice, a constant reminder of their precarious situation. Days bled into weeks, marked only by the subtle shift in the ethereal light, the persistent gnawing of the cold, and the growing unease among the crew. Walton, ever the optimist, had initially dismissed their anxieties as the natural consequence of hardship. He spoke of perseverance, of the ultimate reward that awaited them, of the unique bond forged in shared adversity. But even his resolute spirit had begun to fray. The sheer scale of their predicament, the utter lack of any human intervention, the knowledge that they were utterly alone, adrift in a sea of frozen oblivion, began to weigh heavily upon him. He found himself staring out at the endless expanse, not with the thrill of discovery, but with a growing sense of dread.
The crew, once a band of enthusiastic adventurers, had become a fractured, dispirited group. The wind howled a mournful dirge, a symphony of despair that seemed to permeate the very marrow of his bones. It whispered tales of failure, of dreams shattered, of lives lost. Walton found himself listening, not with defiance, but with a strange, melancholic acceptance. He was a seeker, yes, but in this desolate expanse, he was also a prisoner, a man stripped bare of his pretenses, facing the stark reality of his own limitations. The grand expedition, conceived in the fervor of ambition, had become a crucible, forging him in the fires of adversity, preparing him, though he knew it not, for an encounter that would eclipse all his imagined triumphs and shatter his very understanding of the world.
The figure was impossibly gaunt, a mere silhouette against the vastness, moving with a jerky, desperate gait. It was a specter, a phantom conjured from the very ice, and for a moment, Walton’s mind, strained by isolation and the perpetual chill, conjured images of frostbite-induced hallucinations. Yet, the scraping persisted, growing louder, more distinct. It was the sound of something being dragged, or perhaps the desperate scrabbling of hands against the frozen surface.
“Captain!” The shout, hoarse and urgent, came from one of the watchmen, a burly sailor named Thomas, his face etched with disbelief. “There’s a man out there!”
Walton rushed to the deck, the biting wind instantly whipping at his face. The crew, galvanized by this anomaly, had already begun to muster, their expressions a mixture of shock and morbid curiosity. The solitary figure was closer now, a pathetic testament to the unforgiving nature of this world. He was a man stripped of all semblance of strength, his limbs moving with a painful, disjointed rhythm. His clothing, if it could be called that, was tattered and encrusted with ice, offering little protection against the frigid onslaught. He moved as if propelled by an unseen force, a desperate, final surge of will against the encroaching oblivion.
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