{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Cartography Chamber of Kublai Khan","description":"You stand in a vast circular chamber deep within the Khan's palace in Khanbaliq. Sunlight streams through high windows, illuminating countless maps pinned to wooden frames. Your workbench is cluttered with ink bottles, quills, and parchment—some bearing accurate surveys of the empire's true territories, others filled with strange notations and coordinates that don't align with any known geography.\n\nOn the wall behind you hangs your masterwork: a great map of Asia commissioned by Kublai Khan himself. But something troubles you deeply. Three weeks ago, you noticed discrepancies—entire kingdoms marked by Marco Polo and other travelers that seem to exist nowhere when you cross-reference them with your field measurements. The coordinates are precise. The descriptions are detailed. Yet when merchants follow the trade routes to these places, the routes themselves seem to... shift. Changed.\n\nYour supervisor, the aging scholar Chen Wei, has begun asking uncomfortable questions about your recent mapping revisions. On your desk lies an urgent letter, still unsealed, requesting your presence.\n\nThe chamber is quiet except for the distant sound of palace guards changing shifts.","suggestedActions":["Read the unsealed letter on your desk","Examine the great wall map more closely, particularly the regions Marco Polo described","Search through your recent field notes and surveys","Leave the chamber to find Chen Wei in the archives"],"conversation":"p2t2yf19pdzcoprruc7q"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}