This chapter's epigraph comes from a line in the play's first chapter, in which Dr. Bledsoe says, "I'm going to kill you, because you're so good at killing people." The epigraph is a reference to a famous line from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in which Romeo says that he's going to "kill you" , and the scene shifts to the present, where the three musketeers are discussing how they're going to finish the dungeon. They're discussing the fact that they've been working together for so long, and that they can't
This chapter's epigraph comes from a line in the play's first chapter, in which Dr. Bledsoe says, "I'm going to kill you, because you're so good at killing people." The epigraph is a reference to a famous line from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in which Romeo says that he's going to "kill you" , and the scene shifts to the present, where the three musketeers are discussing how they're going to finish the dungeon. They're discussing the fact that they've been working together for so long, and that they can't