Posts Tagged ‘Eugenie Theriot’

Letter to the editor

by on Saturday, May 10th, 2014

From the Office of the Mayor
Saturday, May 10

Dear Tattler,
 
Sorry about the fishwrapper comment.
 
We still don’t know what all of this number stuff on the radio means.
 
You will recall Miss Theriot discovered that the mysterious numbers on the radio had changed, and thinking it had something to do with coded messages, she sent us both number sequences. I asked for help in decoding them. So far no one has made any progress in decoding either sequence.
 
Maybe we’re missing something, so let’s try again. Here are the numbers from Miss Theriot’s notes, with the strange double zeros and pauses and all.

The first message:
1, 40, 50, 50, 4 … 0, 11, 91, 90, 91, 92, 00, 11, 40, 30, 5 … 1, 61, 20, 50, 11, 90, 5 … 0, 80, 51, 21, 6 (long pause, repeat)
 
The second message:
0, 12, 02, 00, 51, 31, 62, 0 … 1, 41, 5 … 1, 20, 11, 40, 40, 91, 40, 7 … 0, 80, 51, 80, 5 (long pause, repeat)
 
Miss Theriot thought the long pause was the end of the sequence. Maybe the other pauses are the ends of words?
 
Please help if you can. I’ll pay L$2,500 to the first person who can decode both of them, or half of that if someone decodes one.
 
—Henri

Young scientist uncovers mystery

by on Friday, March 28th, 2014

New Toulouse’s very own Eugenie Theriot has discovered something strange about the bayou radio station. While testing her crystal set, Miss Theriot found that the station had changed its broadcast.

“I don’t ever listen to our station anymore,” Miss Theriot said. “It’s just the same old sequence of numbers, repeating endlessly. Always exactly the same, except when it is not. You see, it’s changed.”

The station broadcasts a series of numbers, which Miss Theriot wrote down last year, “after the first fifty-seven times I heard it,” she said. “Because how many times do you really want to hear ‘Forty, fifty, fifty, four … zero, eleven, ninety-one, ninety, ninety-one, ninety-two, zero, eleven, forty, thirty, five … one, sixty-one, twenty, fifty, eleven, ninety, five … zero, eighty, fifty-one, twenty-one, six’? That’s all it ever played, repeated endlessly.”

Hearing the broadcast over the crystal set she built, she had written down the numbers. “I thought the man reciting those numbers might be counting something, or that it had something to do with the weather report, or the strange lights in the bayou, but they never changed. And he always sounded so worried.”

Miss Theriot showed me her notes. She had printed the sequence of numbers in a fine, clear hand. Then she connected the battery terminals to her little radio, and the rich sound of a woman’s voice filled the air: “Zero, eighty, fifty-one, eighty, five.” It was a woman’s voice, very calm, very deliberate.

“See, that’s the long pause, the end of the sequence. Now it will restart!” said Miss Theriot.

Over the radio, the woman’s voice continued: “Zero, twelve, two, zero, fifty-one, thirty-one, sixty-two, zero … one, forty-one, five … one, twenty, eleven, forty, forty, ninety-one, forty, seven … zero, eighty, fifty-one, eighty, five. Zero, twelve, two, zero, fifty-one, thirty-one, sixty-two, zero … one, forty-one, five … one, twenty, eleven, forty, forty, ninety-one, forty, seven … zero, eighty, fifty-one, eighty, five. Zero, twelve, two, zero, fifty-one, thirty-one, sixty-two, zero … one, forty-one, five … one, twenty, eleven, forty, forty, ninety-one, forty, seven … zero, eighty, fifty-one, eighty, five.”

Miss Theriot played it a few times and then turned it off. “Nobody knows what this is all about, or why New Toulouse even has a radio station. And that thing has really high power, too. Why? Who is going to listen to it for more than a couple minutes? Who built that thing? Have you ever even seen anyone in the station?”

She handed me a copy of her notes and pointed to her suitcase. “I’m taking the next boat out,” she said, “I’ll see you next year. If you’re still here.”


Gigi Lapin lives in New Toulouse Bayou with her pet crawfish, Jimbo.

Reward offered for time travel

by on Sunday, January 19th, 2014

Anyone wishing to receive L$30,000 and a lifetime of free rent in the New Toulouse parcel of their choice, please visit Kari’s Bar & Dance during the party the evening of January 17, 2014, and say, “Ponchartrain-Pogostick” to Mayor Henri Godenot.

New Toulouse’s own Miss Eugenie Theriot has proposed a very clever experiment to prove or disprove the existence of time travel. She asked the mayor to offer a suitable reward, collectable in the past. Our wise young scholar tells us that if time travel is ever invented, any traveler can just zip on over to the party and collect it.


Jack Mondieu, Ace Reporter, is a figment of your imagination.