{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Your Office - Woodward Avenue Community Services","description":"You sit at a worn desk cluttered with case files, coffee-stained folders, and scattered notes from today's sessions. The afternoon light filters through partially-closed blinds, casting shadows across the cramped office you've occupied for the past three years. The walls are decorated with community resources, a framed social work degree, and a map of Detroit's neighborhoods marked with red pins indicating your client locations.\n\nOver the past two weeks, an unusual pattern has emerged in your client intake notes. At least five separate individuals—people from different blocks, with no connection to each other—have mentioned similar experiences: vivid, recurring visions of the neighborhood as it was decades ago. They describe it with uncanny detail: the shine of chrome on old automobiles, the smell of fresh bread from bakeries long since closed, the sound of children playing in parks now overgrown with weeds.\n\nMost troubling are the objects. Mrs. Chen found a Polaroid photograph from 1957 in the basement of an abandoned building on Clairmount—a photo of *her younger self*, yet she's never been in that building before. Marcus discovered a love letter dated 1952 addressed to someone with his exact family name, written in handwriting that matches his own grandfather's.\n\nYou have notes stacked before you. Case files. Patterns. Questions. Tonight, you need to venture into the neighborhood yourself and investigate.","suggestedActions":["Review the case files on your desk for more details about your clients' experiences","Head to Mrs. Chen's residence on Clairmount Avenue to examine the photograph she found","Visit Marcus at his family home to discuss the love letter discovery","Drive through the neighborhood to observe the current conditions and get a sense of the area"],"conversation":"7gyttk9vfwxwtispcacd2"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}