119 Vhalar 718
The snow was beginning to pile up at the edges of the roads, Ky saw as she headed to the library, glad of the layers of bright wool and leather keeping her warm. Inside the library was warmer and drier than anything outside, and there were books to read, which was an advantage on her home. Well, new books anyway. She owned a couple of recipe books, but she had read them end to end many times. They didn't hold the same attraction.
Once inside, she browsed the shelves, glad to see the unsteady ones appeared to have been repaired. One rescue was enough! Enough warmth seeped in that she unfastened her leather coat and let it fall open, revealing the yellow shirt and green trousers underneath. One book on anatomy caught her eye and she leafed through it, studying the diagrams more than the old-fashioned language. She stopped on a spread of pages that showed how the bodies of animals compared with humans. Each diagram showed both a human and the animal being compared, with joint lines running from a single name to the bodyparts on both being described. She learned that a horse's hooves corresponded to her own fingernails and toenails. Only bigger, she commented dryly under her breath, wriggling her toes in her boots. Like humans, horses only had one stomach. Cows on the other hand had four, and rechewed and swallowed their food between stomachs. They also had split hooves where horses had a solid one. Interestingly, humans had a bone where the tail should be, even if nothing hung out behind. She eyed the long bones on bats where fingers had become wings instead, and the extended hand bones of a dog's "legs". Backbones at least remained much the same no matter the animal, but snakes had open ribs (and used them to move) whereas human ones were solidly connected. She grinned to herself, seeing all the different ways that creatures had adapted to move. Then real movement caught at the corner of her eye, and she looked up.
The snow was beginning to pile up at the edges of the roads, Ky saw as she headed to the library, glad of the layers of bright wool and leather keeping her warm. Inside the library was warmer and drier than anything outside, and there were books to read, which was an advantage on her home. Well, new books anyway. She owned a couple of recipe books, but she had read them end to end many times. They didn't hold the same attraction.
Once inside, she browsed the shelves, glad to see the unsteady ones appeared to have been repaired. One rescue was enough! Enough warmth seeped in that she unfastened her leather coat and let it fall open, revealing the yellow shirt and green trousers underneath. One book on anatomy caught her eye and she leafed through it, studying the diagrams more than the old-fashioned language. She stopped on a spread of pages that showed how the bodies of animals compared with humans. Each diagram showed both a human and the animal being compared, with joint lines running from a single name to the bodyparts on both being described. She learned that a horse's hooves corresponded to her own fingernails and toenails. Only bigger, she commented dryly under her breath, wriggling her toes in her boots. Like humans, horses only had one stomach. Cows on the other hand had four, and rechewed and swallowed their food between stomachs. They also had split hooves where horses had a solid one. Interestingly, humans had a bone where the tail should be, even if nothing hung out behind. She eyed the long bones on bats where fingers had become wings instead, and the extended hand bones of a dog's "legs". Backbones at least remained much the same no matter the animal, but snakes had open ribs (and used them to move) whereas human ones were solidly connected. She grinned to herself, seeing all the different ways that creatures had adapted to move. Then real movement caught at the corner of her eye, and she looked up.

