RALPH: So Romeo, you're a married man. Congratulations.
ROMEO: Thanks, thanks a lot, Ralph. That means a lot to me.
RALPH: You must be feeling pretty good right now.
ROMEO: Oh, what can I say? I'm walking on air.
RALPH: So it's right after the wedding ceremony. And you're walking through the streets of Verona when you come upon a meeting of two packs of men, you might say. And you see Mercutio and Tybalt talking face to face.
ROMEO: Really?
RALPH: Yes, and it doesn't take long for Tybalt to turn to you and call you a villain. I guess that's something of an insult.
ROMEO: No matter, it doesn't mean anything. I have reason to love him now.
RALPH: Now that you're related to him through your marriage to Juliet?
ROMEO: That's right. And so my newfound love for him overcomes any anger I might feel at being called a villain. He doesn't know who he's talking to. I'll just walk past.
RALPH: Well, not quite so fast. Tybalt says that you've done him wrong, and he challenges you to a duel on the spot.
ROMEO: How have I hurt him? I love him more than he knows. And soon, he'll know why.
RALPH: Once he learns about the wedding?
ROMEO: I love the name Capulet as much as I love my own name. Let me tell him that. If I could just—
RALPH: I'm sorry. Things just aren't going to go your way. Mercutio can't understand your strange behavior. And he decides to accept the challenge himself.
ROMEO: Oh—no no no no no—I can't let that happen, Ralph.
RALPH: Well, Tybalt draws his sword and so does Mercutio.
ROMEO: Oh, come on, no. He can't do that. He needs to put his sword away.
RALPH: I'm afraid they start going at it pretty quickly.
ROMEO: They can't do this, Ralph. I need to stop them.
RALPH: You are trying, believe me. But they just won't listen to you. You even get between them to try to break it up.
ROMEO: And?
RALPH: Well, you're not going to like this part. Tybalt reaches his sword under your arm and stabs Mercutio, and then he runs off.
ROMEO: He stabs him? Is he hurt?
RALPH: Yeah, he says it's just a scratch. But it's enough of a scratch.
ROMEO: I bet it's not too bad. Mercutio's invincible.
RALPH: "Not as deep as a well," he says, "nor as wide as a church door." But it's bad enough. He thinks he's going to die.
ROMEO: Oh, jeez, I was just trying to help.
RALPH: He curses both your houses, the Montagues and the Capulets. Then Benvolio leads him off to find some help.
ROMEO: Oh, my god. Mercutio, my friend, mortally stabbed for my sake? Tybalt slandering me in public, who's been my cousin for the past hour? Oh, Juliet, has your beauty made me soft?
RALPH: Romeo, Benvolio returns to tell you that Mercutio is dead.
ROMEO: Dead? Already?
RALPH: Yes. And you say, "This day's black fate on more days doth depend. This but begins the woe others must end." What does that mean?
ROMEO: Oh, this is bad, Ralph. I get the feeling this is just the start of worse things to come.
RALPH: Well, as soon as you say that, Tybalt reappears.
ROMEO: Seriously? Tybalt alive and Mercutio slain? So much for trying to get along with my new in-laws. I've got to fight them, Ralph. Mercutio's soul floats above us, and one of us is going to go with him.
RALPH: Well, Tybalt is happy to oblige. You fall to fighting. And soon enough, you've killed him.
ROMEO: He's dead?
RALPH: Yes, and Benvolio is quick to point out that the prince has promised a death sentence for anyone caught fighting in the streets. He thinks your only hope is to run and to not get caught.
ROMEO: Man, oh, man. A fortunes fool, Ralph, fortune's fool.
RALPH: It does seem to be some very bad luck. Sorry about that.
ROMEO: It's not your fault.