Suspense 490210 327 De Mortuis (128 44) 28247 29m27s
# De Mortuis
As the CBS orchestra swells with ominous strings and that unforgettable *Suspense* theme pierces the darkness of your living room, you're about to enter a world where the dead refuse to stay buried. In "De Mortuis"—a title drawn from the Latin maxim "de mortuis nil nisi bonum," speak nothing but good of the dead—a seemingly respectable citizen harbors a secret so sinister that it threatens to unravel his carefully constructed life. What begins as an ordinary evening takes a chilling turn when past transgressions surface, and a man discovers that some debts cannot be settled by time or distance alone. With each passing moment, the walls close tighter, the stakes grow higher, and you'll find yourself gripping your chair, wondering just how far someone will go to keep their darkest secrets buried.
*Suspense* was radio's premier anthology of terror, a show that understood that the human imagination was far more powerful than any special effect. Broadcast live from 1942 to 1962, these twenty-nine-minute episodes became the gold standard of thriller entertainment, attracting top-tier talent and millions of devoted listeners who made appointment radio listening an American ritual. "De Mortuis" exemplifies the show's mastery of psychological horror—eschewing cheap jump-scares for slow-burning dread that creeps under your skin and settles there. The writing is taut, the performances electric with tension, and the moral ambiguity leaves you questioning long after the final dramatic stab of the orchestra.
Don't miss your chance to experience one of radio's most expertly crafted suspense tales. Tune in to "De Mortuis" and remember: in the world of *Suspense*, the past always has a way of catching up.