{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Telegraph Office - Evening Shift","description":"You sit at your workstation in the dimly lit telegraph office of Millbrook Industrial City, the year being 1889. The steady tick-tick-tick of incoming messages fills the air, punctuated by the mechanical clang of the printing apparatus. Gas lamps cast long shadows across rows of desks, most now empty as your colleagues have left for the evening. Your desk is cluttered with message forms, a coffee mug gone cold hours ago, and the leather-bound logbook where you record all incoming transmissions.\n\nThe office itself is a testament to modern progress—brass fittings, polished wood, and the latest telegraph equipment line the walls. Through the tall windows, you can see the silhouettes of factory smokestacks against the darkening sky, their chimneys still belching smoke even at this late hour.\n\nIt is then that something unusual happens. A message begins printing on your apparatus—nothing strange about that, except the date stamp reads: APRIL 15, 1919. Thirty years in the future. The message is garbled and difficult to read, but one phrase is unmistakable: 'DO NOT LET THEM USE THE MACHINES FOR THE WORKERS.'\n\nYour hands tremble slightly as you stare at the impossible transmission.","suggestedActions":["Examine the strange message more carefully","Check the telegraph equipment to see if it is malfunctioning","Look through your logbook for any similar anomalies","Alert your supervisor about the transmission","Try to send a reply to the sender of the message"],"conversation":"8cs1vcoy9xc1938icw722k"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}