Like most of the other stories I've found, this is an adaptation of a John Dickson Carr story originally written for Suspense - in fact, it's the most famous of all of Carr's Suspense plays - "Cabin B-13," first performed on Suspense March 16, 1943; in 1948, Carr had a series on CBS called Cabin B-13.
Our uncredited adaptation is from Girl Comics#7 (March, 1951) and it's called "If a Girl Be Mad." From the title, you might think Girl Comics was one of the many Marvel romance books of the era; actually, it was an unusual anthology book that featured stories from pretty much every genre, simply geared towards a female audience.
As in the original radio play the protagonist is a woman named Meg. She and her recently-wed husband are taking a voyage aboard a ship. He shows her to their cabin on B deck, number 13. Just a few minutes later, both he and the cabin disappear. The ship's doctor helps Meg and determines her husband was really the ship's first officer and had contrived a seriously, ridiculously complicated plan to murder her.
All of Carr's original story is intact - a few characters have different names (while the ship's doctor isn't named at all), but the fact that the cabin is still B-13 demonstrates Marvel wasn't working too hard to conceal the story's origins. So, maybe this story was supposed to be printed in Suspense but was somehow shifted to Girl Comics.
I've always had some fondness for the "Cabin B-13" radio play even though, like so much of Carr's fiction, I find it daft; the husband's entire plan of "disappearing" is to hide on a ship where everyone knows who he is! The only reason he seems to "disappear" is that Meg keeps insisting she came aboard with her husband and all the literal-minded crewmen say they never saw her husband; none of them knew the ship's first officer had been married, so if just one of them had said, "I didn't see your husband, you were with the ship's first officer" his brilliant plan would have fallen apart then and there.




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