{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Stone Pier of Mykines","description":"You stand on the weathered stone pier of Mykines, your travel bag at your feet. The dock creaks beneath you, slick with brine and something that looks almost luminescent in the grey afternoon light. Behind you, the ferry that brought you here three months ago—before the storms trapped you here—sits silent and deteriorating at its moorage, its radio long since fallen to static.\n\nThe village of Mykines stretches before you up the rocky slope: a cluster of turf-roofed houses with walls painted in faded reds and blues. Smoke rises from several chimneys, but the usual sounds of the island—the cacophony of puffins, the calls of fishermen, the rumble of daily life—are absent. Instead, an unsettling quiet hangs over everything, broken only by the rhythmic crash of waves and a low, rhythmic chanting that seems to drift from somewhere within the village.\n\nYour notes from the past three months weigh heavily in your satchel. The linguistic changes you've documented have accelerated dramatically. What started as subtle phonetic shifts has become something inexplicable. Yesterday, old Jón spoke to you in a language you recognized from 10th-century texts—words that should have been dead for a thousand years. And his eyes... they seemed confused, as though he was searching for a memory just beyond reach.\n\nThe cliffs surrounding the island rise like ancient sentinels. To the north, the stone circles—those mysterious arrangements you came here to study—seem darker somehow, their surfaces catching the light in ways that shouldn't be geometrically possible.","suggestedActions":["Head up to the village to find inhabitants and document their language","Examine the stone circles on the northern cliffs","Inspect the abandoned ferry for any supplies or a working radio","Visit your lodgings to review your research notes"],"conversation":"qvdhc9dpn7n0h6ez4ce40g"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}