{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Your Childhood Home in Ijebu Village","description":"You stand in the modest but comfortable parlor of your family home, the place where you spent your childhood before leaving for studies in London and America. Afternoon sunlight filters through the wooden shutters, casting warm stripes across the worn furniture. The walls are decorated with family photographs and a faded map of Nigeria. Your mother's voice echoes from the kitchen, but there is an unusual tension in the air—quite different from the warm welcomes you remember.\n\nThrough the window, you can hear an unfamiliar sound: the distant rumble and mechanical grinding of the oil drilling operations that have arrived in the Niger Delta just beyond the village boundaries. The sound is continuous, almost hypnotic.\n\nOn the small wooden table near you sits a letter, already opened, bearing the official seal of Shell-BP. Next to it, a traditional Yoruba beaded necklace—one you haven't seen in years—has been placed deliberately, as if waiting for you.\n\nYour father, the village elder, is nowhere to be seen. Your mother has been calling for you since you arrived this morning, but she seems reluctant to speak about the recent troubles. The village elders have requested your presence at a meeting tonight.\n\nThe year is 1962. Nigeria has been independent for only two years, and already the promises of oil wealth seem to be bringing only misfortune.","suggestedActions":["Read the letter from Shell-BP on the table","Ask your mother about the recent troubles in the village","Pick up the beaded necklace and examine it","Leave the house and explore the village","Ask where your father is"],"conversation":"bjzlihj67ylm1nb584pzg"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}