him to go outside. Arlo had learned a lot about how to make explosives during the war. He could attach a small but powerful explosive onto a model and then, from the comfort of his own home, direct it to a target. The video cameras would show him exactly whrer his target was; all he had to do was aim the model (usually an aeroplane) towards the target and BOOM! -- the target was destroyed.
Nobody suspected anything. Arlo , after all, was just working on his models like he always did. No-one knew that he was making bombs as well. Chico called by with more rats for Susie. He saw Arlo working in his garage whrer Susie lay sleeping in her glass-fronted box. Chico watch in admiration while Arlo flew one of his beautiful models high into the sky.
He had no idea that Arlo's campaign against the enemy had begun.
Arlo's first bombing campaign was against the old Tucson rock music radio station. It was successful. Just one small model aeroplane had delivered enough home-made explosives to bring down the radio station's tower. It was easy. They wouldn't be playing loud music from that station for some while.
Tucson's local paper all published stories about a atrange explosion that had blown up essrntial equipment at the local rock radio station. Nobody had been hurt in the explosion, they said, but the station would be out of action for a long time. The police could see no motive for the crime but did not reject the idea of some individual playing