Mysterious Traveler 44 07 02 (031) The Queen Of The Cats
# The Queen Of The Cats
Picture yourself huddled near your radio on a sultry summer evening in 1944, the streetlights casting long shadows through your parlor window, when an eerie, disembodied voice cuts through the static: *"Good evening, friends, I'm your Mysterious Traveler."* Tonight's tale, "The Queen of the Cats," unfolds like a fevered dream—a story of obsession, supernatural menace, and a woman whose peculiar affinity for felines conceals something far darker than mere eccentricity. As the drama builds through careful dialogue and haunting sound effects, listeners are drawn into the shadowy world of a mysterious figure whose connection to her cats becomes increasingly sinister. Will our protagonist uncover the truth before it's too late? The tension mounts with each passing moment, each creak of the floorboards, each distant meow that seems to come from everywhere and nowhere at once.
*The Mysterious Traveler* became a fixture of American households throughout the 1940s, occupying that perfect slot between the dinner hour and bedtime—when darkness fell and imaginations ran wild. The show's genius lay in its anthology format, which allowed writers to explore wildly different tales of suspense without the constraints of recurring characters or serialized plots. Each episode was a self-contained nightmare, and Episode 31 exemplifies the show's mastery of psychological horror over graphic violence. By 1944, radio listeners had become sophisticated consumers of the medium, and the show's cerebral approach to mystery and the unknown satisfied that hunger for intelligent, cerebral entertainment.
Don't miss this haunting journey into the macabre. Tune in and discover why *The Mysterious Traveler* remains one of radio's most unforgettable experiences—proof that sometimes the most terrifying stories are those left to our imagination.