good morning, sir. i will, sir. yes, thank you, sir. madame cavalieri is here for her lesson, sir. are you herr mozart? my name is lorl, sir. i'm a maidservant. i was asked to come here and offer my services to you. they'll be paid for by a great admirer or yours who wishes to remain anon - anonymous. i can't tell you that, ma'am. yes. i can live in or out just as you wish. not at all, sir. and i was told to wait for an answer. but i really can't tell you, sir. that's right, ma'am. yes, ma'am. right away, ma'am. they're out every night, sir. till all hours. oh, thank you, sir. not that i've seen. oh, yes, sir, all day long. he never leaves the house until evening. he just sits there, writing and writing. he doesn't even eat. oh, i wouldn't know that, sir. oh, thank you, sir! i think i've found out about the money, sir. he kept seven snuff boxes in here. i could swear they were all gold. and now look there's only one left. and inside, sir, look - i counted them - tickets from the pawnshop. six of them. in there, sir. i'm leaving. i'm not working there anymore. i'm scared! you don't know what it's like. herr mozart frightens me. he drinks all day, then takes all that medicine and it makes him worse. i don't know. he has pains. here, in his stomach. they bend him right over. i'm frightened, sir. really! when he speaks, he doesn't make any sense. you know he said he saw - he said he saw his father. and his father's dead. i suppose so. he sits there all he time, doing some silly opera. please don't ask me to go back again. i'm frightened! i'm very, very frightened.