Howdy,
The device is something like /dev/svca. I haven't done anything with it myself, 
but maybe it could be useful.
Speakup is a great screen reader. I personally love it and would happily be 
using it now, except the Odroid kernel doesn't include staging, so no speakup 
for me. I have to find an alternative. I have been using full graphical for a 
while now. Brltty has at least gotten me back partially to where I want to be. 
A lot of people think the screen reader doesn't belong in the kernel. 
Personally I could care less if it is in the kernel or user space, just so long 
as it works. I don't care about the politics, just the functionality lol, and 
speakup rocks.
As for getting it working with pulse, I can't take credit for that. Chrys figured that out. You just have to drop in 2 files and it will start playing nicely together. I have attached them here. The client.conf goes in the pulse config for root: Place the default.pa in your ~/.config/pulse directory
Finally restart pulseaudio or reboot your computer and it should work. 
Sometimes brltty speech will be crackly, so just do a sudo systemctl restart 
brltty and it should fix it. Speech with espeak is a bit too quiet even on 
loudest setting, but other than that, it is very responsive and quite nice to 
use.
On Sat, Jul 02, 2016 at 09:21:58PM -0400, Dave Mielke wrote:
[quoted lines by Storm Dragon on 2016/07/02 at 18:24 -0400]

It can make for a lot of speaking. But there's usually a silence speech key to
interupt if you don't want to hear what is being spoken. Also, most screen
readers have a setting, in a lot of cases default, that interupts incoming
speech whenever you press anything on the keyboard, typing a word, pressing
shift, etc.

Brltty has a command (KPPeriod + KP7) to go up to the previous command prompt,
and another command (KPPlus + KP2) to speak from where you are down to the
bottom of the screen. I think that these commands, when used together,
effectively do what's being asekd for. I suppose, if there's a need, we could
add a third command that does both of them.

I seem to remember hearing about something in /dev that con provide the
screen's output for updates to the screen, but that nothing currently uses it,
speakup included.

I'm unaware of any such device.

I was finally told that brltty could act as a screen reader,

Just to be picky: Brltty is a screen reader. It's just that it's primary target
is braille users. I think that you're referring to speech-oriented screen
readers.

This brings me to a question: There seems to have been a significant growth in
those looking at brltty to be their speech screen reader lately. Does anyone
know why? Is Speakup, for some reason, no longer the speech screen reader of
choice?

And, while I'm asking questions, I have another one for you: There's a guy on
this list who's been trying to get brltty's espeak speech driver, via Pulse
Audio, to work reliably. From what you've written, you seem to have figured out
how to do it. Would you mind describing how you've set all this stuff up on
your system?

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.include /etc/pulse/default.pa
load-module module-native-protocol-unix auth-anonymous=1 socket=/tmp/pulse.sock 

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