{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Telegraph Office - Trans-Siberian Pneumatic Express","description":"You are seated at a brass telegraph key in a cramped but efficient office aboard the Trans-Siberian Pneumatic Express. The walls vibrate with the rhythmic pulse of the pneumatic tubes, and the constant hum of the massive steam engines beneath your feet creates a steady thrum that you've grown accustomed to over the past two years.\n\nBefore you lies an array of morse code equipment: your trusted telegraph key, a paper tape receiver that chatters occasionally with incoming messages, and a leather-bound log where all transmissions are recorded. A brass clock mounted above the desk reads 14:47. Through the small porthole window to your left, you can see the snow-covered Russian landscape blurring past at an alarming speed.\n\nThe office is lit by electric lamps—a luxury of this modern pneumatic express. Your shift began three hours ago without incident, but approximately twenty minutes past, you received an unusual morse code transmission from a station called 'Krasnov Junction.' The problem is, Krasnov Junction does not appear on any of your route maps.\n\nSince then, three more messages have arrived from stations that should not exist. Your supervisor is currently in the engine car, and the rest of the crew is scattered throughout the passenger capsule.\n\nThe paper tape receiver sits idle now, but you sense something is profoundly wrong.","suggestedActions":["Examine the paper tape receiver for the mysterious messages","Check your route maps and compare them to the station names","Open the log book and review today's transmissions","Send a morse code message to the engine car"],"conversation":"5ozz3d8asqqq689oz0va3"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}