![]() Henry's death leaves widow Caldonia substantial cotton fields, a slave quarter, a still little-used cemetery, and the fine two-story house he and slave Moses built. Fern Elston lives about eight miles from her friend Caldonia. Henry's parents moved as far away from the white-owned plantations as they could, on the southern border. Townsend bought his first acres of land from Robbins. Henry Townsend's land neighbors Robbins's land. Spreading out around the town are plantations, most prominently those of rivals William Robbins and Robert Colfax, who largely determine who will serve as sheriff. The sheriff's office and the barn behind it which sometimes houses prisoners, alone receive attention. ![]() The setting of most of the novel, Manchester County is the largest county in the Commonwealth of Virginia, heavily wooded, prosperous, and largely crimeless. ![]()
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