Sheep. âWow.â
âWho will direct the Opera?â Ned asked. âWe need someone who can handle The Grand March.â
âThe Grand March,â enthused Cate. âThatâs when they bring in all the animals, chests of gold, drummers and dancers captured in battle. Our farm animals will want to march.â
Duck, Sheep and Parrot looked at each other. Here was a chance.
âWonderful,â said Mr Bigge.
âPuppets would be better,â said Ned.
âWe shall have real animals AND dancing puppets,â decided Cate.
âThe only dancer around here is Pig,â snorted Parrot.
âHe did a wonderful belly dance at our concert,â said Duck who would never forget Pigâs amazing twirls.
âQuite stole the show,â said Sheep.
âWhy donât you direct it, Ned?â said Mr Bigge.
âWeâll have a meeting. Ask volunteers to make costumes and be in the show,â said Cate.
âCost a fortune,â said Ned.
Cate smiled. âYou didnât buy many pencils last year Ned. Thereâs a bit of money left. Use that.â
âIâll give you money, âsaid Mr Bigge. âBut Aida must go on at the right time. Iâve got TV cameras coming.â
Ned nodded. âCould we use the hayshed for making costumes and puppets and for rehearsals?â
Nedâs thin face looked happy. He was going to direct an opera. Duck remembered how he felt when he had almost âdirectedâ the farm animals in the TV commercial. Getting people (and animals) to work together was a big job.
âJust send me the bills.â Mr Bigge left.
âMr Bigge has big ideas to sell his apartments,â said Duck to Parrot and Sheep. âThis Grand March may need our helpâ.
Chapter 3
The Rehearsal
Saturday morning was the first rehearsal.
âWhatâs an opera?â asked Goat.
âA story told in song,â explained Parrot.
âAny drumming?â asked Goat.
âYes. Everybody loves Aida because of the Grand March when the animals come on.â
âSo, weâre going to be in it,â said Duck.
All the animals waited outside the hayshed. Ned was explaining how to make a paper mache elephant to a bunch of school girls. Others were trying on costumes, or painting big gold banners. People were singing loudly in groups, and stopping when Ned told them what to do.
âThe Grand March has to be GRAND,â said Ned. âThe singing has to be loud and the puppets big.â
âHumph! Real animals out of paper,â said Pig. âI donât think so.â
Ned talked to another group. âAncient Egyptians wore coloured woollen wigs. Weâll need fifty wigs in pink, green, blue and yellow for the chorus.â
Sheepâs eyes sparkled. âI could colour my wool.â
Just then, two boys carried in two large chairs.
âWhatâll we do with these, Ned?â
âCarve ducks on the legs,â said Ned. âEgyptians liked to carve ducks on their furniture. The king will sit on one.â
âTwo duck chairs coming up,â said the red haired boy.
âDuck chairs!â squawked Duck. âDidnât know we were so important.â
âBy the way, Ned, whatâs a duck look like?â asked the boy.
Ned pointed. âThereâs one standing beside you. Use him as a model.â
Duck was scooped up and plonked on top of a ladder.
âSit still duck, I need to copy your feathers,â said the boy.
Duck had a grand view of the hayshed. Tables were full of coloured material for costumes. The girls making the paper mache animals were covered in glue and water. Things didnât seem to be going too well with the elephant head.
âHold still, duck.â
Duck imagined himself as a duck in ancient Egypt. He must look up Egypt on the Internet.
âTeabreak!â called Cate.
Ned led his helpers to the farm kitchen for sandwiches and juice. Music was