{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Your Office - Victoria Island, Lagos","description":"The ceiling fan creaks overhead, doing little to dispel the humid Lagos heat that seeps through the jalousie windows. Your office is modest but deliberate—a desk cluttered with case files, a telephone that hasn't stopped ringing all morning, and shelves lined with linguistics textbooks and government reports you've kept from your old life.\n\nIt's early morning, June 1974. The city outside your window is already alive with the sounds of traffic and street vendors. On your desk lies a telegram, delivered just an hour ago. The message is brief but intriguing:\n\n'BRONZE PLAQUE STOLEN FROM BRITISH MUSEUM. CIRCUMSTANCES IMPOSSIBLE. INVESTIGATING LOCALLY. WILLING TO PAY HANDSOMELY FOR DISCRETION AND RESULTS. MEET COLONIAL BAR, IKOYI, NOON TODAY. ASK FOR MR. PEMBROKE.'\n\nYou know what a Benin plaque is—your linguistic work once brought you into contact with museum officials and antiquities dealers. These bronze works are priceless, irreplaceable records of Benin history and craftsmanship. But a theft from the British Museum that was deemed impossible? That suggests something far more complex than common theft.\n\nThe clock on your wall reads 10:47 AM. You have time to prepare, but not much.","suggestedActions":["Examine the telegram more closely for clues about who sent it","Search through your old government files for information about Benin artifacts","Head to the Colonial Bar in Ikoyi to meet Mr. Pembroke","Make a phone call to an old contact in the museum world","Prepare your office and notes before leaving"],"conversation":"r2mo8wxmcsz3zi3zw886"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}