Atmoshpheric mystery/thriller narration in English with characters.

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Audiobooks
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Description

Audiobook sample/ mystery/thriller

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Young Adult (18-35)

Accents

North American (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
Barons, Vermont, November 1950. The sun vanished below the horizon as the girl crested the rise of Old Baron's road night and she still had three miles to go. The air here went blue at dusk. Purplish and cold. A light that blurred details as if one were looking through smoke. Squinting the girl cast a glance back at the road where it climbed the rise behind her. The breeze tussling her hair and creeping through the thin fabric of her collar, but no one that she could see was following still faster. She thought she hurried down the slope, her thick schoolgirls shoes, pelting stones onto the broken road. Her long legs moving like a fs as she kept her balance, she'd outgrown the gray wool skirt. She wore it hung above her knees now, but there was nothing to be done about it. She carried her uniform skirt in the suitcase that banged against her legs and she'd be putting it back on soon enough if I'm lucky, stop it. Stupid, stupid faster. Her palms were sweaty against the suitcase handle. She'd nearly dropped the case as she'd wrestled it off the bus in haste perspiration, stinging her back and armpits as she glanced up at the bus's windows. Everything. All right, the driver had asked something about the panic in a teenage girl's face penetrating his disinterest. Yes. Yes. She'd given him a ghastly smile and a wave and turned away the case, banging her knees as if she were bustling off down a busy city street and not making slow progress across a cracked stretch of pavement. Known only as the north road, the shadows had grown long and she'd glanced back as the door closed and again, as the bus drew away, no one else had gotten off the bus. The scrape of her shoes and the far off call of a crow were the only sounds she was alone. No one had followed. Not yet. She reached the bottom of the slope of old Baron's road panting in her haste. She made herself keep her gaze forward to look back would be to tempt it. If she only looked forward, it would stay away. The cold wind blew up again, freezing her sweat to ice. She bent, pushed her body faster. If she cut through the trees, she'd travel an exact diagonal that would land her in the sports field where at least she had a chance. She'd meet someone on the way to her dorm. A shorter route than this one which circled around the woods to the front gates of idle wild hall. But that meant leaving the road walking through the trees in the dark, she could lose direction. She couldn't decide her heart gave a quick stutter behind her rib cage, then returned to its pounding exertion. Always did this to her. As did fear. The toxic mix of both made her lightheaded for a minute. Unable to think. Her body still wasn't quite right though. She was 15, her breasts were small and she'd started bleeding. Only last year, the doctor had warned her there would be a delay, perfectly normal. A biological aftereffect of malnutrition. You're young and you'll recover. He'd said, but it's **** on the body. The phrase had echoed with her for a while. Sifting past the jumble of her thoughts. **** on the body. It was darkly funny. Even when her distant relatives had peered at her afterward and asked what the doctor had said. She'd found herself replying. He said it's **** on the body. At the bemused looks that followed. She tried to say something comforting. At least I still have all my teeth. They'd looked away. Then these Americans who didn't understand what an achievement it was to keep all your teeth. She'd been quiet after that.