Quoted By:
~ FEBRUARY 13 2012 ~
Your first tour on the campaign trail went as well as you hoped for. Eight cities across eight days across eight states, you managed to put together a good series of rallies where you went. Whether it was the deep red states of Oklahoma and Utah or the blue wall of California and Colorado, there were more than enough people rooting for you in the southwest to have a very successful tour. As you board Air Force One and depart back to Washington, you take a look at the stops you made. Denver, Albuquerque, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Oklahoma City and Houston in the order.
According to one of your campaign staff, you drummed up an average of 20,000 people per rally. Not bad during the primary season, you think to yourself. Not bad at all. Your best rally was, no surprise, in Denver in no due part thanks to your history there. Not only that, but your Denver rally managed to attraction some nationwide attention since it took place during the Republican primary in Colorado as well. The media noted that you were campaigning only a few blocks away from one of the GOP frontrunners. Other than that, your tour was quite normal.
While you were out in the southwest, the young members of your campaign staff whipped together a website and a few social media pages for you. Facebook, YouTube, BlogSpot and Twitter now has your presence on it with semi-regular updates. One of your aides suggested some place called four chan, but that didn't go anywhere. With the money you managed to collect from tickets and merchandise sales (oh yeah, you started producing those now), you had enough money to air your first ad online. It was met with only a moderate uptick in traffic to your website. With this tour concluded and your online space developed, your campaign has truly kicked off now.
The phone rings. You pick it up.
“Sir, we have a location on Beyno-“
“Hold on.”
You get out of your chair and close the door to the plane’s office before sitting back down.
“Continue.”
“We have a probable location on Cecil Beynon. He seems to be staying in a motel in Midland, Ontario. We didn’t see him with anybody else.”
Damn, that was quick. You figured this would be a month-long affair, not a week.
“Do my men have permission to enter, Mr. President?”
“Yes.”
>Roll 1d20. DC: 18. Best of three.