WEBSTER SPRINGS, W.Va. -- It’s a long way to anywhere from Webster Springs, West Virginia, a blink of a town clinging to coal-crusted mountains in the middle of the state. And for many of the 700 or so people who call it home, that is part of the appeal. “I like the isolation,” said Edith Tenney, 49, who works at Vickie’s Restaurant, one of a handful of eateries in the town. “It’s quiet and there are a lot of good people here.