Clock 47 09 18ep46 Ophelia
# The Clock: "Ophelia"
As midnight approaches and The Clock's familiar chimes echo through your radio speaker, you're transported to a shadowy world where a young woman's desperate plea sets in motion a mystery that will keep you guessing until the very last second ticks away. In "Ophelia," listeners are drawn into the claustrophobic tension of a single fateful night, where nothing is quite as it seems and everyone harbors secrets. A woman bearing only the name Ophelia arrives at a safe house with a dangerous package and a story that doesn't quite add up. As the minutes count down like the ticking of an unseen clock, suspicion mounts among those sheltering her—is she a victim in need of protection, or something far more sinister? The writing crackles with mid-century noir sensibility, sparse but powerful, letting pauses and silence become characters themselves in this intimate drama of trust betrayed and loyalties tested.
The Clock represented something revolutionary in 1946: the anthology format perfected for radio, where each fifteen-minute episode was a complete, self-contained world unto itself. Rather than following recurring characters, the show's true protagonist was time itself—that relentless force that traps its characters into impossible moral choices. "Ophelia" exemplifies why the series became a listener favorite, delivering the kind of psychological mystery that only radio could achieve, where your own imagination supplied the shadows and the menace lurking just beyond the microphone's range.
Don't miss this masterpiece of compressed storytelling. Tune in to The Clock's "Ophelia" and discover why millions of listeners made it a date with destiny every broadcast week. Some mysteries demand to be heard.