Timestamp: shortly after Nya leaves her parents' home
The world was a terribly big place. Some said this simple realization marked the end of the most innocent part of one's childhood. Especially when you realized that not only was this world completely outside your control, but it cared nothing if you were happy or sad, if you lived or died. For Nya Winters, at the very least, the world had recently become a lot bigger. She was out on her own, finding herself and her true nature somewhere in the middle of this wild world.
A lot of it seemed to consist of forests, truth be told. Human settlements were few and far between, and animals far outnumbered the sentient races, having claimed back what had once been taken from them. While there were numerous signs of civilization from times past, most of them were just a reminder of what had once been. A ruined wall here, remnants of a road there, a skeletal tower over there. Sometimes, if one but stopped to dig a little hole, old coins battered out of shape would see the light of day again. The faces on the coins spoke of proud people long since fallen into oblivion just like the hands that had touched the money.
Some time later, Nya would find herself a nice territory in the Cobalt Mountains, but this tale is about a warm day earlier that summer. She instantly knew, upon waking up that morning, that something was different. The air tickled her skin and the breeze caressed her nostrils more personally than on most days, and with more purpose. Many of the tiny breezes, Nya knew, only carried meaningless noise, but this one was teasing her, as if to attract her attention.
It did not immediately speak, though. It lingered there, strong enough to be picked up, but not strong enough to be understood, for the greater part of the day. If questioned, it would give no answer, but it would just keep teasing the Kelvic as she hunted and explored and just busied herself with her life. As if waiting for something to happen, or just finding amusement in her reaction.
Syna got all the way up in the sky and began to descend once more. When the solar disc was halfway between zenith and twilight, the voice of the breeze was finally heard. Whimsical, yet driven by endless willpower. It knew that simple messages were most likely to attract Nya's attention, and it kept it quite simple. "Take a detour. A few miles to the East. Now. You will arrive shortly before sunset. See for yourself. Learn. Then decide what is the right thing to do. I am leaving this in your hands, Nya."
Suddenly, the mysterious breeze vanished, and Nya found herself breathing the same old air as always, not a breath of wind blowing through the motionless foliage. The message had been given, but whether Nya chose to act upon it or move on with her newfound freedom was entirely up to her.