Storytime

Storytime London

Short stories read live in London. storytimelondon.substack.com

Episodes

  1. 04/06/2025

    #11 (Adam RW)

    Final episode for now. Audio production by Iona Lowe. Story and reading by Adam RW. Originally read at the Storytime Winter Solstice on 20 December 2024. TOMORROW Their correspondence continued. His grandfather had resolved the question of the caps lock button and now deployed it at appropriate intervals. But now, he encountered other inbox issues for he was inundated with pitches and recommendations. Though his knowledge of the underlying technicalities was admittedly limited, he found himself increasingly optimistic about Bitcoin’s prospects. As an optimistic octogenarian, he was open to overtures made by some of the more fringe political parties. And, though he had been contentedly married for sixty-two years, Gramps was intrigued by the content of emails with banners bearing the words HOT RUSSIAN WOMEN Obediently, he would forward each such email to Greg, accompanied by a What do you think of this one? on the line above. Greg now had to ensure he did not check these at work. After a quick scan, he would reply, Gramps, it’s spam, stop clicking on it. But Gramps could not understand where they would have obtained his email address. They must be friends of friends or something, he replied. Gramps, no… there are massive databases with these things. I’ll set up a rule so they all get deleted without you reading. But I might want to check them? Gramps asked with a question mark. No Gramps, Greg said, just leave them. A pause then in their correspondence. Alright, said Gramps finally. These were not the only issues. Gramps found himself exploring the formatting boxes, pushing the text into a range of fonts and effects. “F**k’s sake”, Greg would whisper, as an email zoomed in from Gramps with a slow motion, sparkly reveal of a message in comic sans font size 196 that read: Next door neighbour’s dog been hit by a car. How does he even do that? Greg murmured to himself. “I literally would not know how to do that if I wanted to”. Is it alright? Greg replied. Nope, Gramps replied, in Verdana, font size 8, dead. Gramps ventured further into the settings box, discovering the delay send button and clicking it indiscriminately. Greg emailed one Sunday about a visit the following day and received the reply from his grandpa, a one-liner reading: “Looking forward to it” three and a half weeks later. In more irritable moments, these things enraged him, and he wondered why his older relative could not learn how to effectively program the machine. But in smaller, and more significant ways, he came to rely on their emails. “Not doing that well this week, Gramps, off work. Struggling a bit. Hope you and grandma are well”. Gramps tended not to delay his replies to these. Sorry to hear it, boyo. Look after yourself. Work can wait. Take good care. Get outside if you can. Lots of love from both of us. This was good advice from the older man. But somehow, Greg lacked the requisite combination of will or ability. And he sank down and denser, further still. Their emails could elicit a brief smile but something had stopped filtering through. Dissolution, not quite there, standing in queues, walking to work, checking his phone. Not sure about tomorrow, Greg tapped out to his grandfather, sorry gramps. He lay down at night, staring at the ceiling, truthfully not thinking of much at all, kitchen floor cool against his back. The pre-emptive guilt a shield against the blade, contemplating his father having to drive the half an hour or so, parking carefully, getting out and pausing momentarily to lean on the roof of the car, heavy with it, to tell them. The prospect of his own responsibility for that moment was what held him back most times, right wrist upturned to the fluorescent light, left hand shaking, before dragging himself to bed. Gramps slipped away quietly on the morning of his favourite sort of autumn day, clear blue, ice in the air, leaves ablaze in the trees, mushrooms clustered on rotting oak. Greg had not received a reply to his last email. There was some clarity in the grief, something sharp about the jobs to be done. But as days passed, the compression returned. There was a funeral, he knew, he had been, pushing himself into a dark enough suit and making a quiet speech. But the fabric and substance of the day, Greg could not comment on. He retained nothing of it. The days cracked and popped as they shrank, as if they were releasing something. He would wake to check the time at some inexplicable hour, drape a limp hand across his forehead and roll over, try to sleep, push it back, wake in the evening, spend the night on his phone. He knew now that there would be no more emails, no warming buzz, no more requests to screen messages from would-be brides or business partners or tell an uncle something or help with the attic room. His inbox was empty. Then there was one, a little red “one” above his inbox icon early on a Saturday morning, from his grandfather’s email address. Greg assumed it was an administrative cock-up or a tone deaf prank from a cousin. But then he saw it was titled TOMORROW (all in caps) and he remembered his grandfather’s adventures with the delay send button. Hello boyo, Gramps said, in lower case, sorry to hear you’re still not feeling well. I know you’ve seen a doctor and I hope that it is useful. I know it helped your mum for a time. I’m not sure there’s much I can say but. Gramps had pressed the enter button twice here. Firstly, I did some research and you were right, the Peruvian royal family doesn’t even exist. Thank you AGAIN (in capitals) for helping me with the emails. I am always very grateful. If this had been a conversation, Greg would have sensed Gramps on the cusp of struggling to say something. Tender isn’t weak. It makes you what you are. And that means many, many (the second many was inexplicably in superscript) people care about you. I am at the top of that list. You might not be quite where you want to be. And I’m sorry about everything that’s happened. But - two dashes, new line, font change. I am very proud of who you’ve become. I can’t promise you that things will definitely get better. But please just make it to TOMORROW (the word had been capitalised). And see where you get to from there. Lots of love, Gramps PS. We’re both on our sick beds at the moment - sleep terrible. Trying to sort those damned settings buttons how you showed me - hopefully this will get to you later this morning so it doesn’t wake you up. Send me an email when you get this. Greg wiped his screen. 9.20am on 21 December. The days were getting longer. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storytimelondon.substack.com

    13 min
  2. 28/05/2025

    #10 (Adam RW)

    Huge thanks and credit to Iona Lowe for audio production and editing. Story and reading by Adam RW. Full story below. Please get in touch if you enjoyed this new format and want us to do more. TODAY There were a number of less notable differences between Greg and his grandpa. Greg’s warm embrace would be met by an uncertain pat on the back from his older relative. The ease with which Greg said “I love you” would be greeted with a sombre nod and a single “yes”. Greg’s commitment to whimsy, his grandpa’s taste for order and calm. These were all by the by, a standard and predictable set of contrasts that would not look out of place in your average dining room. But there was one fundamental difference between them. And this was his grandpa’s insistence on shouting. WE ARE WELL THANK YOU Two lines. No punctuation. Phone calls, increasingly infrequent, face-to-face meetings even rarer now with the busyness of day-to-day life. So they came to rely on emails to communicate. But his grandpa did not appear to be aware of the existence of the caps lock button. So every exchange took on the appearance of a terse tennis match, Greg gently lobbing small invitations to his grandpa who then smashed them back in his face. Sorry for the slow reply, Gramps, Greg would type in the proper case and tense, as if his own style might serve as a gentle hint to his grandpa on the correct means of expressing himself. Things are a bit crazy at the moment. How are you getting on, how was your weekend? Two hours later: IT WAS GOOD Enter, enter. THANK YOU Then, another email, five minutes afterwards. HOW ARE YOU Hours later in the pub, Greg would flick open his phone and look down at the email before sighing and hastily stashing it away. He pulled out it back out at the end of the weekend and tapped out a quick few words in response. His grandpa fired back. BOUGHT FISHCAKES AT THE SHOP TODAY Nice! Greg replied some two days later. He allowed himself an exclamation mark in some attempt to match his grandpa’s tone. How were they? Proper case, question mark correctly sitting at the end of the sentence. Grandpa came back. NOT BAD BIT HOT ON THE INSIDE THOUGH BURNT MY MOUTH Greg chuckled. A few hours later. What are you up to today? GETTING MY PROSTATE CHECKED Ah! Greg paused, unsure of how to respond with the requisite level of seriousness. Hope it goes well, he typed. Smiley face. DON’T WORRY JUST A CHECK-UP THE DOCTOR IS A NICE CHAP And so it went. Greg could not help but be slightly confused by these exchanges. Because by hand his grandfather had been an excellent writer of letters, punctuating them with great distinction, displaying a full mastery of the usage of upper and lower cases. But these modern methods of communication seemed to do something to him, render him unable to convey himself with the gentle precision that was his trademark in normal speech. What was it in a computer’s keyboard and screen that transmogrified him into something less. Greg was unsure. He did not have the time to come to a firm conclusion. Weeks passed and their correspondence slowed. But on a morning in the height of summer, Greg opened his phone and scrolled down through a cluttered inbox. There sat within it tickets, bookings, marketing assaults, photos, reminders, maps of life. He descended passively, a waiter in an elevator, until the bell dinged as he reached a single glistening unread email from his Grandfather. It was titled TODAY. Quite naturally, all in caps. TODAY IS 8 HOURS AND 49 MINUTES LONGER THAN THE SHORTEST DAY OBVIOUSLY THATS NOT RIGHT - BOTH DAYS ARE 24 HOURS LONG It was still all in caps. But he did not hear him shouting anymore. BUT TODAY - THERE ARE 8 HOURS AND 49 MINUTES MORE DAYLIGHT THAN SIX MONTHS AGO AND SIX MONTHS TIME IT IS AN UNLOVELY NUMBER THERE DOES NOT APPEAR TO BE ANY SPECIAL SIGNIFICANCE TO IT BUT STILL THE THOUGHT - NOT THE NUMBER - WARMS ME THAT THE DAY CAN MORE THAN DOUBLE IN THE SPACE OF SIX SHORT MONTHS NEED TO REMEMBER THIS WHEN IT GETS COLD AGAIN AND I KNOW THE LAST FEW YEARS HVE BEEN HARD FOR YOU AND I HAVE NOT BEEN VERY GOOD AT SPEAKING TO YOU ABOUT IT BUT I MISS YOUR MUM EVERY DAY I THINK WHEN SHE WENT THAT WAS ALMOST IT FOR ME I KNOW YOU SHOULDNT HAVE A FAVOURITE BUT Grandpa left this line unfinished. SO I AM SORRY BUT I ALWAYS LOVED THAT SHE WAS BORN ON THE LONGEST DAY Greg wiped his face and looked up at the sky. He had never relished the length of the solstice, each extending second a reminder of what the day had been. He paused for a moment then typed back. Thanks Gramps. I really appreciate that. Lots of love to you and Gran. Coming down next weekend - looking forward to seeing you both. Ps. There’s this thing called the caps lock button in the middle on the left hand side of your keyboard. It helps you switch between cases. You can probably Google it - but otherwise I’ll show you when I’m down. Gramps replied instantly in the proper case: I know, he said. Just wanted to make sure that you could hear me. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storytimelondon.substack.com

    14 min

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Short stories read live in London. storytimelondon.substack.com