{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Stasi Archive Processing Center, Berlin","description":"You stand in a cavernous basement room of the former Ministry for State Security headquarters. Fluorescent lights flicker overhead, casting harsh shadows across rows of filing cabinets and cardboard boxes. The air smells of dust and aging paper. Around you, a handful of other workers—some former Stasi like yourself, others newly hired archivists—sort through decades of confiscated files. The Berlin Wall fell only three months ago, and now the machinery of the secret police is being dismantled by those who once served it.\n\nOn the metal desk in front of you sits a cardboard box labeled '1955-1963 PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH—CLASSIFIED.' It was supposed to go to the incinerator, but something made you pull it aside. Your fingers tremble slightly as you notice the dates don't match the label. Some documents are dated 1987. 1989. Even 1990.\n\nA colleague named Dieter sits two tables away, his head bent over his work. He hasn't made eye contact with anyone all day. When you glanced at him earlier, you could have sworn his pupils were dilated, and there was something unsettling in his expression—a kind of blank recognition, as if he were looking through you rather than at you.","suggestedActions":["Open the cardboard box and examine its contents","Walk over to Dieter and try to start a conversation","Ask the supervisor about the misfiled box","Look around the room for other unusual documents"],"conversation":"rfoc8fhzoubjkt9oe05n8"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}