One strip mall. One fading signal. One day that might matter more than she thinks.
Jennifer Tolanstack just needs one good story—something honest, maybe even a little weird—to justify the long hours she’s poured into her fading podcast. So she returns to her hometown of Springfield, Illinois, to document the final day of TechShack, the last RadioShack in the state and the beating heart of a dying strip mall.
Over the course of a single, winding day, Jennifer interviews regulars, collects cassette hiss and radio static, and reconnects with the kind of stubborn souls who still fix things instead of throwing them away. But the closer she listens, the stranger the signal becomes—phantom voices, flickering screens, and a hum beneath the surface that might not be imagination.
Jennifer is a day-in-the-life novelette set in the world of The Last TechShack, expanding the Coaxial Drift universe with a grounded, emotionally rich story about memory, community, and analog hope. Whether read as a prelude, a companion, or a standalone moment between static, this story asks what’s worth holding onto when everything else fades.