{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Lagos Police Headquarters - Detective's Office","description":"You are seated at a cluttered desk in the Criminal Investigation Division of the Lagos Police Force. Outside your window, the bustling streets of Lagos shimmer in the afternoon heat—vendors call out their wares, lorries rumble past, and the air carries the mingled scents of the Atlantic and the city's commerce. It is 1963, and Nigeria's independence still feels fresh, like morning dew that hasn't quite burned away.\n\nOn your desk lies a peculiar case file, its manila cover already stained with coffee rings. Inside are photographs of stolen artifacts: a bronze head, intricately detailed and regal; several wooden sculptures; and what appears to be a collection of small golden weights. Attached to the file is a note written in an unfamiliar script—curved, elegant, angular. Your superior mentioned it was N'Ko, an indigenous writing system.\n\nMost unsettling are the small piles of reddish earth found at each crime scene, carefully preserved in glass vials. The laboratory analysis indicates the soil composition matches regions in the Sahel—places that haven't supported human settlement in centuries. How such earth came to be scattered across Lagos, Accra, and other cities remains a mystery.\n\nYour superior has left you with orders: investigate, and report back with findings. The thefts have garnered attention from museum directors and private collectors across West Africa. Time is of the essence.","suggestedActions":["Examine the artifacts in the case file more closely","Study the N'Ko note left at the crime scenes","Inspect the vials of red earth","Head to the National Museum to speak with curators","Review the list of stolen items and theft locations"],"conversation":"4ttaq4m5bn81q8covvr0ef"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}