Chapter 10“Noa Quadrant is the poorest quadrant in the city. The hovels you saw as we drove by are what people of this quadrant live in,” Diakono Copperwith explained. We had already driven by many of the small gray buildings that had to be the size of a single room. It was morning, and people were outside. They watched our car as we drove by and I remembered Diakono Copperwith telling me about the unbelievers that lived in this quadrant. I assumed that the festivals did not matter to these people at all. I couldn’t imagine a family living in such a place. The duplexes on the west side back home in Charlesville were at least twice the size of these hovels. Also, the duplexes were decorated and fixed up because those people cared about where they lived. The hovels were all the same color,

