Owen sits in his room, on his bed, and spaces out. He doesn't exactly ponder about anything specific just yet, more like an overall view of his life; he'd never felt so free. When he was out there, swimming out of the outer dome, it was as if it was entirely different water to him; fresher, better.
And then he thinks about that large ball of fire he saw shining through the water. Its rays were so radiant and bright, cutting through the oceanscape. Owen didn't touch them, for fearing the unknown, but now that he thinks about it, he wish he had. A whole new world of wonders awaits Owen upon the surface of the sea, but he missed his opportunity it seems.
Someone knocks on his door. He doesn't answer right away, partially because he finds himself lost in thought. But quickly, he shakes himself out of it, and answers.
"You can come in."
The door creaks slowly, and his father steps in. He walks over to Owen's bed, and takes a seat at the edge; Owen doesn't budge one bit. What he merely does is shift his body weight, laying back along his bed.
"So, what kind of consequences am I looking at for this endeavor?"
"I'm not here to talk about your punishment...if I even decide to give you one."
"What?"
Owen sits back up, putting his arms locked around his knees.
"Then what could you possibly be here for then?"
"Can't we just talk? We did a pretty good job at it the last time."
"Keywords, dad: pretty good."
Orin gets up from his bed, and walks over to Owen's night stand. He kneels down a bit, finding the switch to his lamp, and turns it on.
"It's a marvelous thing, isn't it? Light, of course."
"It's okay, I guess."
"When I found you out in the ocean, before I pulled you back in I--"
Orin stops for a brief second, wishing he had chosen better words. However has didn't therefore he must just move on."
"...I saw you reaching out towards the surface, grasping for something."
Owen doesn't respond. Orin turns around, and their eyes meet. Course, this doesn't last too long because Orin turns back facing the window now. He slowly glides his hand loosely across the smoothly crafted window sill.
"In case you were curious...it's called the Sun."
"How could you do that to me? Hmm? I never felt so free, but you just had to stop me; you and your damn laws. Well I broke your laws father, and you know what I felt? Do you know what I experienced? Happiness at its fullest. It was like I was one with the sea."
Orin's creates a sudden grip on the window sill in reaction to Owen's last sentence, cracking it as he does so. He turns around, as if seeing a ghost; Mera said something similar to him once about such a feeling whenever she swam.
"Our last conversation, while better than right now, wasn't entirely complete, son. I never spoke of some of your mother's most fondest of memories. And for that, I apologize."
Orin turns from the window sill, and pulls up a chair to his bed from his small table, sitting down.
"She, like you, viewed the entire ocean as her playground. When you were little, it was clear that someone would see you swimming, and point out 'that's Mera's boy'. It wasn't cause of your green eyes either, my son. It was because you were so much like her."
Owen smiles, and Orin stands up, putting his arm around his son as he points outward towards the window.
"And there are times when you are still like her. Oh, the similarities sometimes are too many to count. She too probably would've hated the idea of the outer dome...but...at the time it seemed for the best."
"Probably, dad?"
"It had been talked about for years, tracking back to even before my time as King. But many argued that what is now known as the inner dome, was enough in the old days. But it was for the sake of mainly your mother, that I never allowed such a job to be started. She loved swimming freely outside the city of Poseidonis, playing with the animals; a lot like you did when you were still a baby. She argued that the only thing measuring close to her love of her family, was her love and freedom of the sea. And yet...now I look upon the magical waters that make up the outer dome, and feel like I've betrayed her...perversed my own dream for the greater good and protection of Atlantis."
"Why did you do it then, dad? If even Mom was against it...why did you go through with it?"
Orin's grip around his son's shoulders loosened, and he sighed a great deep sigh before he answered his son. He turned to face him, and again their eyes met, and again Orin grew weak as he sow those same green eyes he used to see in Mera.
"I became...fragile, and strucken with loss...becoming desperate, I finally gave in to such a construction. But that time around, I proposed to change the initial plans. And that is why, it is now an almost invisible magical cloak of water; impenetrable to say the least."
"The loss of what?"
"Please...do not continue to play this game you are playing, my son. I already know. I know you entered the Archives. But I do not feel any betrayal or anger more than I do for myself, for it is I that has betrayed you. I shouldn't have kept it all a secret, my son. The very idea of making Mera's memory nothing more than a ghost has haunted me ever since the day she was taken from me."
"...from the disease you mean, right?"
Orin responds shocked in his expression. He hadn't known what Owen read, only assumed.
"What did you read back in the Archives?"
"It was how you met mom. She didn't die from a disease?"
"No."
"...I knew it..."
Owen gets up from his bed, and walks around his room as he takes it all in. He tries to hold back any anger he has for his father, because he feels he may finally understand some of it; why the way things are. Perhaps now he will learn it all. So he turns, leaning against his small table.
"...How did she die?"