
Carl Freeman
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Geo Dell

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
He started to see things. Faces in the shadows, whispers in the wind, the ghostly echoes of his victims. He'd initially dismissed them as the effects of alcohol withdrawal, but they grew more vivid, more menacing. He was no longer alone in his self-imposed exile; he was surrounded by the ghosts of his past, his own personal hell.
Sleep offered no escape, only a descent into nightmarish landscapes where the line between reality and delusion blurred. He dreamt of the woman, the widow, her face etched with a sorrow so profound it pierced even the darkest corners of his tortured mind. Her quiet, unyielding grief was a mirror reflecting the true cost of his actions, a stark contrast to the hollow victories he'd celebrated.
The hallucinations weren't just visual; he began to hear things, too. Whispers in the dark, cries for help from the abyss. He heard the rhythmic thud of his own heartbeat, a relentless drumbeat of guilt against his ribs. He tried to pray, to find solace in faith, but the words wouldn't come. The God he'd invoked during his killing spree seemed distant, indifferent, or perhaps simply nonexistent.
One night, the voices coalesced into a single, chilling chorus. They spoke of his depravity, of the irreversible damage he’d inflicted on the world. The voices were him, his own conscience, a manifestation of his guilt, whispering truths he'd desperately tried to ignore. They reminded him of his inability to undo what he'd done, his utter inability to cleanse himself of the bloodstains on his soul.
He began to understand the true nature of the apocalypse he'd sought to prevent. It wasn't a global catastrophe, a fiery rain from the heavens; it was a self-inflicted wound, a slow, agonizing decay of his own humanity. He was already destroyed. The cleansing he'd craved wasn't a purge of the world; it was a purge of his own wretched soul. And that purification, that atonement, would be a far greater burden than any war he could wage...