{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Detroit Department of Human Services - Office Cubicle","description":"You sit at your cluttered desk in the cramped cubicle farm of the Detroit Department of Human Services. Gray particle board dividers surround you on three sides, topped with yellowed papers and faded case files. Your computer monitor casts a pale glow across scattered folders marked with names and dates.\n\nIt's early morning, and the office is still quiet. Coffee from yesterday sits cold in a chipped mug next to your keyboard. Through the grimy window behind your desk, you can see the Detroit skyline—a mixture of gutted warehouses and glinting new construction cranes.\n\nOn your desk lies a file labeled 'MULTI-CASE CLUSTER - GRAND RIVER CORRIDOR.' Your supervisor left it for you before the holiday weekend. Inside are notes about three families that have gone missing over the past six months from addresses in the Corktown and Delray neighborhoods. All cases show the same peculiarities: no signs of forced entry, no struggle, belongings left behind. The file also contains a handwritten note from an Elder at the Anishinaabe Center that references something called 'The Collectors'—an old story, a warning.\n\nYour coffee has gone cold. You have work to do.","suggestedActions":["Open the case file and read the missing persons details","Check your computer for case notes and property records","Call the Anishinaabe Center to speak with the Elder who left the note","Review the addresses of the missing families on a map"],"conversation":"xcgszx8ktlnrhkowz3debp"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}