Read DuckStar / Cyberfarm Online
Authors: Hazel Edwards
Head-Sets
Duck pulled open the barn door. All day, the technos had been busy putting up their display.
âWe'd better try things out, âsaid Parrot.
So the farm animals had a play.
Each of the farm animals had a favourite cybergame.
Duck tried on the helmet, which had been fixed. His bill still didn't fit.
Pig saw “Inside Pig” from bite to poo. âHow clever I am!' He never knew he looked like that inside!
Parrot spoke into the voice commander.
âPolly wants a cybercracker!'
Goat danced to Farm Rap music.
Sheep sat on the photocopier, by mistake, when trying to pat a button.
Cow pushed the cyber milk-machine push-pull.
Horse tried the animated flick-book.
âThese are fun, but they're not warm like us,' decided Horse. âI think the children will still want to ride me.'
Duck wasn't sure. But putting on a show for the visitors might help.
âRemember there's a REAL Feral outside,' Parrot warned.
True, thought Duck. I'd better do some research.
Scare Feral
Overnight, Duck borrowed one of Cate's book. He looked up the word “feral”.
âFeral means wild.' Parrot peered over Duck's shoulder.
âMad sort of wild? Or not tame?' Duck had heard of wild ducks. âWhy is the Feral so wild?'
âNever asked it,' said Parrot. âI'm not keen on being a parrot sandwich.'
âHorse is so big. Why would the Feral worry him?' said Duck.
âThe Feral makes a very loud cry. Once it jumped on Horse's back, dug in its claws, rode him like a jockey andâ¦' Parrot was just getting started on the story when Cate walked in.
âHello Duck. Nice to hear you're enjoying the new displays. Any problems?'
âIt's under control, Cate.'
Duck had two problems. How to put on a non-boring show for the visitors, and what to do about the Feral. Was there some way he could do both at once? Could the Feral be tamed? Or frightened away?
Cate dragged some bales of straw across the yard. âOn Saturday we're having a special day at the farm. Scarecrow Day. Children and their parents dress up as scarecrows.' Cate panted as she moved the bales into rows like seats.
âIs a scarecrow a new type of bird?' asked Duck.
âScarecrows are meant to scare away birds who eat crops. Being a scarecrow means getting dressed up in raggedy clothes and scaring people. It's fun.'
Duck had an idea. Could a scarecrow work on a Feral? For the rest of the day, he gathering useful things. An old broom. A mop. Overalls. A cap left behind. He borrowed a mirror and a tape-recorder from Cate. He told the other animals of his plan.
That night, they had the final rehearsal. Everything went wrong.
Goat drummed too hard! The bucket split. âOh, my drum's broken!' he cried.
Sheep slipped on a piece of paper while parading wool fashions. There weren't any clothes to show so the animals had cut pictures from the magazines in Cate's kitchen. Duck stuck them all over Sheep's coat to show what could be made out of wool. Some fell off.
Pig refused to dance unless he came first on the program.
Parrot had a sore throat and nearly lost his voice.
The Chickens couldn't sing together, and Rooster said he should go first with a Morning Crow. Horse was too big to fit on the “stage”.
Duck was trying very hard to be a good director, but nothing went right.
All the animals argued and got noisier and grumpier.
âCould you dance a little slower please, Pig,' said Duck.
âIf I can't belly dance my way, I won't be in the show,' grumbled Pig.
Duck put his beak under his wing. He mustn't give up. He needed some time out but he was Director Duck. He took his head out from under this wing. âThis is only the rehearsal. Let's try one more time.'
âA bad rehearsal means a good show,' Horse soothed.
âIf the Feral returns there won't be enough of us for the choir,' said the Chickens.
âThe Feral!' The Chickens fled. The other animals ran to where Duck had told them to go earlir. Horse held up the mirror. Parrot had the spotlight.
âOver here, Feral!' cried Duck as he hit the RECORD button on Cate's tape- recorder with his beak. Then he climbed onto the highest shelf.
A large bundle of orange fur skidded into the barn. The Feral looked up to find the voice but Duck was hidden.
Duck shivered. The Feral was just beneath him. This was no time to drop a feather. Or anything else.
It prowled around and kicked Goat's broken bucket. It was furious that it couldn't find something to eat.
Duck pressed the REWIND button with his beak and turned up the volume.
The spotlight was ready. Duck flicked the switch. The light hit the mirror and the Feral saw itself, much bigger.
Something else was in the barn too.
In the corner, lurking in the shadows, was the scare-feral. It was very tall, taller than a broom. It had a mop for a face and a cap on top. Overalls billowed out like ghostly clouds. Gumboots dangled above the floor. The strangest thing was the mouth. Sounds came out of it. Loud Feral sounds.
The Feral's own voice was screeching back at it, but much louder!
Director Duck had done a great job with the SFX.
The Feral quivered. It took a step forward.
The scare-feral took a step forward.
Then the Feral let out one more blood chilling scream, turned and fled.
âWe did it!' cried the animals, dropping their dress-ups.
âWe're a scare-feral!'
Laughing, the farm animals came out from behind the broom, overalls, mop and microphone. Now the scare-feral was flat on the ground with the tape-recorder.
âThe Feral got a big fright,' cried Sheep.
âWe used his own voice to frighten him,' added Goat.
âYou directed that well, Duck,' cheered Horse. âWell done for working out what might happen.'
âThanks.â Duck hadn't been sure it would work. They'd had to do as he directed - and they had.
âIf we can put on a show for the Feral, we can do anything!' said Parrot.
âBut this time we want the audience to clap, not run away,' said Sheep.