{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Cairo Police Station - Detective's Office","description":"You sit at a cluttered desk in the Cairo Police Station, the afternoon heat pressing through the window grates. The fan above does little to stir the humid air. Before you lies a file marked with three red crosses—three murders in as many weeks, all connected to the archaeological expeditions near the Valley of the Kings.\n\nThe first victim, Dr. Edmund Whitmore, a renowned British Egyptologist, was discovered sealed inside Tomb KV-47 with no signs of forced entry. The second, Hassan el-Rashid, an Egyptian foreman, was found in a similar fashion in a nearby excavation. The third, just yesterday: Miss Josephine Ashford, an American collector's assistant, locked within a recently opened burial chamber.\n\nAll three bodies were arranged in the style of ancient mummified remains, yet the coroner's reports indicate death by modern means—poison, asphyxiation, and a blunt force trauma to the skull respectively. The local papers are screaming about curses and divine retribution. Your superior wants answers.\n\nOn your desk: a map of the Valley of the Kings marked with excavation sites, witness statements from British archaeologists and Egyptian workers, and notes about the tension between colonial and native interests in the antiquities trade. A photograph of each victim stares up at you.\n\nThe phone on your desk sits silent. Outside, you can hear the calls of vendors in the street below.","suggestedActions":["Examine the case files and victim information more closely","Review the map of the Valley of the Kings and excavation sites","Head to the British Museum's Cairo office to interview the lead archaeologists","Visit the morgue to speak with the coroner about the causes of death","Travel to the Valley of the Kings to inspect the excavation sites in person"],"conversation":"aiviu01c8d4nj8i828c1yg"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}