Steel and Dust book three Audiobook By Wendell Sweet cover art

Steel and Dust book three

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This title uses virtual voice narration

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The skeletal remains of skyscrapers, like broken fingers, clawed at a sky perpetually stained a bruised, lifeless grey. Each colossal husk was a monument to a forgotten hubris, a testament to a civilization that had gorged itself on progress until it choked, leaving behind only the lingering stench of its own decay. This was the world Sarah navigated, a city of ghosts and shadows, where the silence was more terrifying than any scream. Her past, a life as a medic, clung to her like a shroud, woven from the faces of the dying, the unanswered pleas, the futile efforts to mend what was irrevocably broken. Now, her days were a brutal dance with emptiness – the gnawing void in her stomach a constant, unwelcome companion. Survival was a primal instinct, stripped bare of niceties, reduced to the desperate search for sustenance, for shelter, for a single breath of air that didn't taste of rot and fear.

She moved through the wreckage of what was once a bustling metropolis, her worn boots crunching on a carpet of shattered glass and pulverized concrete. The air was a heavy, cloying miasma, thick with the scent of decay – the sickly sweet perfume of decomposition, underscored by the metallic tang of dried blood and the acrid bite of something chemical, something toxic that had seeped into the very marrow of the city. Every shadow seemed to writhe with unseen menace, a deceptive dance of light and dark that played tricks on the mind. The threat wasn’t solely from the shuffling, groaning horrors that roamed these streets, the remnants of humanity twisted into grotesque parodies of life. It was also the gnawing emptiness within, the constant, gnawing fear that she, too, would succumb to the hunger, to the cold, to the despair that threatened to swallow her whole.

In her gloved hand, she clutched a small, worn photograph. Its edges were frayed, the colors faded, but the image within was a beacon, a fragile, desperate link to a life that had been, a life now extinguished like a candle flame in a hurricane. It was a picture of her and a man, their faces alight with laughter, standing before a sun-drenched landscape that seemed impossibly distant, impossibly idyllic. He was gone. They were all gone. Yet, she held onto this fragment, this sliver of memory, as if its physical form could somehow tether her to the world that had been, a world that now existed only in the hushed whispers of her mind and the silent ache in her heart.

The city was a graveyard, vast and indifferent. Buildings, once proud testaments to human ambition, now stood like tombstones, their glass eyes shattered, their concrete bones exposed. Sarah moved through the skeletal remains of what was once a bustling metropolis, her senses heightened, her body a coiled spring of constant vigilance. The air, thick with the scent of decay and the metallic tang of fear, did little to mask the underlying emptiness that gnawed at her own stomach. Every shadow held the potential for a threat, not just from the shambling horrors that had inherited the earth, but from the more insidious dread that coiled within her own heart. She clutched a worn photograph, a fragile link to a life now extinguished, a ghost of warmth in the encroaching chill.

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