After experiencing roughly 13 years of living on Reno\u2019s streets, Linda, 70, says she wants to leave the Biggest Little City. She recently survived a stroke, but says she will not stay in local shelters anymore. \n\n\u201cThey're not nice. Everybody fights to their teeth. I'm staying out on the streets where I\u2019m safe,\u201d she said. Although Linda is among the demographic most susceptible to Covid-19, she remains unafraid. \u201cI'm 100% safe. I have taken the test eight times and negative eight. Now I can leave Nevada safely,\u201d she said. \n\nShe's survived fights, thieves, and mistreatment by others, so she is fearless in a way. But she says she does suffer from \u201cloneliness.\u201d She says people like her gather along railroad tracks, but when the group gets too big, it attracts unwanted attention.\n\nShe says she feels she\u2019s one of the \u201cmentally ill,\u201d but has given up on seeking out resources as well. It\u2019s too much of a hassle, she says. She says she burned her hair. \n\nWhere will she go? She doesn\u2019t want to say, but her rolling suitcase seems neatly packed and she\u2019s by the downtown bus station. In this episode, we will also hear from Tony who says he tries to find harder to access spots not to bother anyone or to get booted in police sweeps. \n\n\u201dThey go on the other side of the river, where all the parks are, so the police kind of leave us alone here,\u201d he said. Unlike many others living in their tents, Tony says he keeps very little so he\u2019s able to quickly adapt to any situation that may come his way. \n\nHe says some of his neighbors sometimes try to go into local shelters on cold nights, but have to wait hours and sometimes get turned away, so many give up even trying. Our reporter for this episode is Gracie Gordon.