In this Weird Fiction short story, Frank Hopson records his days in an audio journal, losing track of dates and struggling to decipher what's real and what's a hallucination due to the human brain's common psychedelic reaction to blindness -- it's called the Charles Bonnet Syndrome. He's recording audio as an official statement, because his mysterious, ominous caregiver, Bertha, wrote in his diary, pretending to be him. Saying how he planned to give her all his money after his death. That didn't sit well with Frank. Not one bit. His life is dominated by Bertha. Bertha has a strange unnerving power. Is she an ordinary human? And is Hoppy really visiting from the mental institution? How much is his imagination, considering that he's experiencing dementia? The reader tries to figure out what's real along, with this vulnerable, lovable old man, grasping for clues as there's no way to know if the caregiver is supernatural or not. But she's certainly dangerous. That we know. Or do we?