In Which Innocence is found in a Vegan Commune; and gains profit by untrammeled display to an unknown public; and in which Dodie discovers Innocence in the cool mountain air.
Innocence made the journey to Brook by train, waving goodbye to her sister and Kedi and wearing the clothes she thought best suited her destination. These were a pair of baggy shorts, sandals and little else except for the rucksack she had over her shoulders. She had decided that the clothes of her sister's district were not really appropriate. The train eventually surfaced in Brook and she disembarked at the town of Sauterelle. She didn't know anyone in Brook except her former lover, Purity, and she thought it would be best to stay with her.
She didn't really know where to go when she arrived in the town - it was much larger than Divin and there were no signposts pointing to Purity's commune. She humped her rucksack over her back and wandered through the streets of thronging bare flesh forever glancing around in the hope of seeing Purity's distinctive dark skin. Purity had given her some very sketchy directions but they didn't seem at all adequate as she paused by a street map just outside a municipal building. She felt curiously conservative in a town where almost all younger people were thoroughly naked and she could compare her own hidden endowments with those of all the men there. However, the street map was of some assistance and she established that the way to Purity's commune was several miles away. After a lot of questioning and searching around, she eventually found a bus which took her within two miles of the commune from which she could walk.
She had curiously romantic views of what Purity's commune would be like. She did not expect it to be in such a very rundown farmhouse. Just outside, sitting in the sun, were a naked couple in the distinctive unkempt appearance that Purity had expected: the man with a long untidy beard obscuring what little of his face was not already covered by his long hair and the woman's face similarly hidden by her long curtains of hair. Innocence introduced herself to them. "I'm looking for my friend Purity," she explained.
"Purity," mused the woman pushing a curtain of hair to one side revealing a long nipple on a tiny breast. "I don't think she's here at the moment. She's always going off all over the place, isn't she?"
"Yes," agreed the man. "She's always travelling. I don't think she's decided what she wants from Brook."
Seeing how disappointed Innocence was with her friend not there and discovering that she really didn't have alternative accommodation, the couple said that she could stay at least until the evening when the commune could discuss if she could stay longer. All decisions affecting the commune had to be decided communally and there were meetings every night for several hours concerning the issues involved. "I think we spend more time talking about what we can do than actually doing it!" remarked the man.
While Innocence waited for the evening meeting to start, she was introduced to other people of the commune. Everyone had let their hair grow freely, wherever there was hair to grow, and Innocence felt very odd with only the stubble of hair on her head which made her look thin and slightly malnourished. They also wore no clothes at all - not even robes or jewellery or shoes - making Innocence feel even more distinct from her company. Not only was there an attitude of naturalness in how people appeared, there was a total openness about their sexual behaviour. Several couples or groups of more than two were indulging in sex when Innocence first met them, and there was no attempt to stop for Innocence's sake. The man would continue fucking away while chatting, totally unembarrassed about it and totally unconcerned about any sensitivity Innocence might have.
Innocence joined in the communal dinner which was a kind of amorphous mush of boiled vegetables which tasted overcooked and rather too spicy. There was no crockery or cutlery used and Innocence had to dip her hand into a large mound of tepid mush to take handfuls of the food and then direct into her mouth what little of it didn't immediately fall onto either the floor or onto her breasts. She began to appreciate the lack of clothes as a way of keeping the laundry duties low.
Eventually, and in a somewhat chaotic way, the meal evolved into the communal meeting she'd been told about. She sat through what seemed to her a very tedious discussion between at most three of the twenty or so people gathered there concerning the political and moral perspectives regarding fairly mundane things such as a shit rota, the division of shared spaces for the benefit of women's freedom from male oppression and the need to demarcate the commune from the road by some kind of a sign. Almost all the discussions were unresolved and there were no votes taken. One of the people who did most of the talking had a habit of wandering well off any subject of general interest to such subjects as her personal relationships and her unsympathetic views on people who wore wool or silk.
Innocence tried hard to appear as interested in the discussion as she felt she ought to be, but she felt rather disorientated and focused on the joints that were being passed around and had more than once lost touch of what the actual topic of discussion was supposed to be. It, therefore, came as a bit of a surprise to become aware that she was now the subject of conversation and that a man with only a nose visible through the black and grey hair of his face was trying to attract her attention.
"Do you agree or not, sister?" he was asking.
Sister? Wondered Innocence, thinking for a moment they must have thought she was still a nun, but then remembered that everyone addressed each other as sister or brother. "With what?"