
Waking Shadows
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Darlene Zagata

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Acerca de esta escucha
They say there’s clarity in silence, but that’s a lie Julian Marr no longer tells himself.
The silence of an empty room — especially one once filled with love — doesn’t offer peace. It gnaws. It waits, circling just outside the edges of thought. And in his new studio, silence had a weight to it, as if it were watching. As if it had something to say but had decided instead to simply linger.
The building was nothing special — a converted warehouse with exposed pipes and a rusted freight elevator that groaned every time it lifted him to the fourth floor. The windows were large, the kind that once invited sunlight but now seemed only to dull it. Light came in gray and stayed that way, regardless of weather.
It was the perfect place to start over.
Julian told himself that, too.
When she left, he hadn’t fought her. He had said too little, too late, and she had packed quickly, quietly, as if she didn’t want the apartment itself to hear. He remembered standing by the door, her keys in his hand, her outline framed by dusk. No goodbye — only a glance that held everything they’d stopped saying months before.
He moved out a week later. He didn’t take much. Just canvases, brushes, a coffee maker, and the folding table he’d turned into a palette sometime around the third sleepless night. The studio was supposed to be temporary. A place to work through the noise in his head. But the quiet followed him here too — and it brought company.
At first, it was nothing. Just the usual long nights, the rhythmic scrape of brush on canvas, the way the overhead light cast hard angles across the walls. Sometimes he painted until his fingers cramped. Sometimes he didn’t sleep at all.
But over time, something changed. Not in the paintings — but around them. Behind them.
Shadows.
Not darker than usual. Not monstrous or crawling. Just… wrong. Slightly off. Delayed. Like echoes of something he hadn’t quite said.
He blamed the lighting, rearranged the lamps. He kept the blinds open during the day. He even stopped painting for a while. But the feeling remained.
Some nights, he thought he heard movement. Not the creak of floorboards or the scrape of the wind through windows — but softer, like shifting cloth or breath held too long.
He told himself it was stress. He told himself it was memory. He told himself all the things people say when they’re trying to avoid the obvious.
But in his gut — the part of him that used to love without fear, the part that painted with his eyes closed — Julian Marr knew: something in this place was trying to be seen.
It wasn’t a ghost.
It wasn’t madness.
It was something he carried.