"The story centres on an elderly émigré couple whose son has become incurably deranged with an acute form of paranoia. On his birthday they try to visit him in hospital, but are dissuaded by the staff from doing so because he has recently attempted to commit suicide. They return home saddened by the harshness of their fate and the hopelessness of the situation. Finally the husband decides that no matter what the circumstances they must bring the boy home to live with them. Whilst they are discussing the details they are interrupted twice by telephone calls – both of which turn out to be wrong numbers. The story ends with the telephone ringing a third time." (Roy Johnson)
Written in English
| Date | Publication | Publisher | Type | Page | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 1948 | The New Yorker, May 15, 1948 | MAGAZINE | |||
| October 1976 |
|
Stories of the Night | William Kimber | Anthology | 110 |
| February 2018 |
|
Lance | Penguin Books | Collection | |2 |
| July 2020 |
|
The Big Book of Modern Fantasy | Vintage Books | Anthology | 13 |
| July 2020 |
|
The Big Book of Modern Fantasy | Vintage Books | Anthology | |13 |