{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Your Desk, Department of Endings, Sub-Level 47","description":"You sit at a gray metal desk in a cubicle identical to the thousands of others surrounding you. The air is thick with the smell of typewriter ribbon and gas lamps. Above, the ceiling is a maze of brass pipes carrying pneumatic tubes between departments. Your desk lamp flickers with a dull orange glow.\n\nA single manila folder sits in your IN tray, marked with today's date in precise bureaucratic script. Something about it seems... wrong. Most closure applications are routine—a mill shutting down, an obsolete railway line, a word like 'veldt' falling from common usage. But this one feels heavier.\n\nYou notice the folder has no applicant name, only a reference number: APPLICATION-7734-HOPE-CLOSURE. The papers inside appear to be in perfect order: all forms completed in triplicate, notarized signatures, environmental impact assessments, even a cost-benefit analysis.\n\nYour supervisor, Mr. Grayson, walks past without looking at you. The pneumatic tube system hisses and clanks somewhere in the walls. You have until the end of business to decide whether to approve or reject this application—or to investigate further.","suggestedActions":["Open the folder and examine the application documents in detail","Ask a colleague at a nearby desk if they've seen anything like this before","Check the department registry to identify who filed the application","Consult the pneumatic tube directory to contact other departments for information"],"conversation":"1upcs7zv7i5z2e1r819ki"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}