{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Listening Post - Communications Room","description":"You stand in a cramped, windowless concrete bunker deep beneath the New Mexico desert. The year is 1969. Banks of radio equipment line the walls, their dials glowing amber in the dim light. Magnetic tape spools turn slowly, recording the endless static of the cosmos. The air is thick with cigarette smoke and the faint hum of electronics. Your desk sits before a complex switchboard, papers scattered across its surface—some covered in cryptic notations, others bearing the faded stamp of CLASSIFIED. The only door is sealed with a heavy lock. A wall clock reads 2:47 AM. You've been here for six hours, monitoring the usual Soviet transmissions, when you hear it again: that strange, rhythmic pulse in the background noise. It's repeating. And somehow, inexplicably, you can almost understand it. Your hands move toward the recording controls. As you do, you notice something unsettling: today's date scrawled on a memo matches a prediction encoded in yesterday's signal—something that hadn't happened yet when the signal was received. Your coffee has gone cold. The station is quiet. Too quiet.","suggestedActions":["Examine the scattered papers on your desk more closely","Review the latest magnetic tape recordings","Check the radio log for unusual activity","Look through the filing cabinets along the wall","Try to contact your handler via the secure phone"],"conversation":"sa2hxrhpvv0v41jx0bfunq"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}