{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Entrance to San Isidro","description":"You arrive at the village of San Isidro on foot, your leather satchel heavy with census forms and writing implements. The mountain pass behind you winds upward into mist, while before you lies a modest Andean settlement of perhaps thirty stone and adobe structures clustered around a small church. The air is thin and cold despite the midday sun.\n\nThe village appears frozen in time—not abandoned, but strangely still. A woman in traditional dress hangs laundry that never seems to move in the breeze. An old man sits on a bench, staring ahead without blinking. Children play silently in the dirt, their game incomprehensible to you.\n\nAt the village center stands a wooden archway with faded lettering: \"San Isidro - Founded 1642.\" Below it, a bell tower rises from a whitewashed church. To your left, a narrow path winds between buildings toward what might be the village elder's house—it's notably larger than the others. To your right, smoke curls from what appears to be a communal kitchen.\n\nNo one has greeted you. No one has acknowledged your arrival.","suggestedActions":["Approach the woman hanging laundry and introduce yourself","Walk toward the church and bell tower","Head to the larger building on the left","Investigate the communal kitchen building on the right"],"conversation":"hbtp09phba3j3fzu2eq8r"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}