Box 13 4x Xx Xx (38) One Of These Four
# Box 13: One Of These Four
When DanHolliday opens that mysterious Box 13 and finds a cryptic message pointing to four suspects—each with motive, opportunity, and secrets to hide—listeners are drawn into a web of deception as tangled as any noir-shadowed street corner. The clock is ticking. A crime has been committed, and only one of these four could be guilty, yet all four have something to lose if the truth emerges. As Holliday peels back layers of alibis and contradictions, the tension mounts with each revelation. The radio crackles with accusation and denial, with the kind of breathless pacing that leaves you hanging on every word—because in 1948, when this episode aired, there were no second chances to rewind, no chance to pause and puzzle it out yourself. You had to follow the logic, the clues, the psychology of these four desperate people, all leading toward a confrontation where only the truth will set one of them free.
Box 13 represented something revolutionary for the syndicated radio circuit: a show that proved the mystery-adventure genre could thrive beyond the major networks, reaching listeners across America through independent stations hungry for compelling content. Created by and starring Alan Ladd—yes, the Hollywood leading man himself—the series brought cinematic intrigue to the intimate medium of radio, where sound effects and voice acting became the entire visual tapestry. These were stories for the discerning listener, sophisticated plotting wrapped in the golden-age conventions of detective fiction, yet infused with the immediacy and emotional intensity only radio could deliver.
Don't miss "One Of These Four." Settle in with the static, the orchestral swells, and the snap of professional voices bringing this puzzle to life. The answer to Box 13's mystery awaits—and it might just be the suspect you least expected.