{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Dusty Road to Ashravati Village","description":"You stand at the edge of a worn dirt road, your leather boots coated in the russet dust of the Indian plains. The year is 1893, and you have been dispatched by the Colonial Office to investigate the peculiar reports emanating from the village of Ashravati, some three miles distant. Your superior officer's letter described the claims as 'preposterous'—that the villagers are somehow aging backwards, defying all natural law and reason.\n\nBefore you stretches the road itself, flanked by fields of wheat and grain in various states of growth. What strikes you as odd is the patchwork nature of the cultivation: plots that should be fallow appear verdant, while others lie dormant in patterns that make no agricultural sense to your trained eye. The late afternoon sun casts long shadows across the landscape.\n\nIn your satchel, you carry your official papers, a leather-bound journal, and a pocket watch—that most reliable instrument of Western precision. To your left, a weathered stone marker bears faded Sanskrit inscriptions. To your right, a narrow footpath winds through a grove of neem trees.\n\nThe village itself is not yet visible, obscured by the undulating terrain and the gathering haze of evening.","suggestedActions":["Proceed down the main road toward the village","Examine the stone marker more closely","Follow the narrow footpath through the neem grove","Consult your journal and make notes about the unusual field patterns"],"conversation":"1zsyfiwizx41ab08slnm82j"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}