Come Back With Me
Picture yourself settling into your favorite chair on a fog-thick evening, the glow of your radio dial the only light in the room. E.G. Marshall's velvet voice draws you into a tale of inexplicable longing as a woman discovers that her husband's mysterious late-night absences aren't explained by infidelity or business—but something far more sinister. When she follows him one fateful night, she stumbles upon a séance in progress, and learns that the man she married may not be entirely of this world. The production unfolds with classic Radio Mystery Theater precision: subtle sound effects of creaking floorboards and whispered incantations, orchestral stings that puncture the silence at precisely the right moments, and a twist that recontextualizes everything you thought you understood about love, loss, and the desperate human need to hold onto those we've lost.
This episode epitomizes what made CBS Radio Mystery Theater a phenomenon throughout its eight-year run during the television age. When networks were abandoning radio drama for the small screen, producer Himan Brown revolutionized the medium by creating hour-long suspense tales crafted specifically for adult audiences, drawing inspiration from classic pulp traditions while maintaining theatrical sophistication. "Come Back With Me" captures the show's sweet spot—grounded in domestic anxiety and emotional authenticity rather than pure Gothic theatricality, yet never losing its supernatural bite. The writing taps into postwar anxieties about the men returning changed from war, about whether we ever truly know our partners.
If you've never experienced the particular magic of Radio Mystery Theater—that intoxicating blend of literary ambition and pure entertainment—this is the perfect entry point. Turn off the television, dim the lights, and surrender to an hour where your imagination does all the heavy lifting. Trust us: once E.G. Marshall begins to speak, you won't want to leave.