Fathom

OCEAN SINK & INERTIA — the sea quietly soaks up most of the extra heat and much of the carbon, and it changes slowly. Slow to warm means slow to cool — there is a delay, and the delay cuts both ways.

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01 Opening
Fathom beat 1 of 5

Far out where the water shifted from bright turquoise to a bruised, heavy navy, Fathom floated near the deep drop-off. She was an old sea turtle with a shell the color of wet slate, scarred by decades of ocean travel. Two glass jars were lashed to her back with braided sea-grass, bobbing gently against her shell as she drifted. One jar was no bigger than a thimble, while the other was a massive, thick-walled gallon jug.

An otter named Pip paddled in frantic, tight circles around her, splashing cold water with his flat tail.

"You promised you would show me something cool today," Pip said, shaking his wet whiskers in frustration. "I feel like I have been floating out here in the middle of nowhere for actual years."

"It has been exactly four minutes," Fathom said, her low voice sounding like smooth stones rolling in the surf. "For a creature as twitchy as an otter, I suppose that qualifies as an eternity."

She carefully untied the grass knots with her beak and set both jars on a floating raft of thick brown kelp. The blazing midday sun beat down on the glass, making the water inside both containers spark like diamonds.

"Go hunt some sea urchins along the reef," Fathom said, sinking slightly into the gentle ocean swell. "Come back when the sun is directly overhead, and then you can touch them."

By noon, the sun was a white-hot coin, and Pip returned with a half-eaten crab. He scrambled onto the kelp, sniffed the small jar, and dipped a single pink paw inside.

"Whoa," he said, blinking. "This small one is surprisingly warm, almost like a shallow tide pool."

He turned to the giant gallon jug and shoved his entire arm deep into the water. He frowned, pulling his paw out quickly and licking the cold drops from his fur.

"The big one is still freezing," Pip said. "Did the sun somehow miss it?"

02 Fathom
Fathom beat 2 of 5

"The same hot sun shone on both jars," Fathom said, her dark eyes reflecting the wide sky. "But the little jar heats up quickly because there is so little water inside to warm."

"The big one takes in the exact same warmth, but it must spread that energy through a massive volume." She patted the dark, cold water beneath her flippers with a slow, heavy stroke. "The ocean is the biggest jar of all," she said, her voice deep and steady. "When the sky gets hot, the sea absorbs most of that extra warmth and tucks it away. It has been cushioning the whole world for decades, soaking up heat the air never had to feel."

Pip stared down into the deep, dark water, his whiskers twitching as he tried to imagine it. "So the ocean has been catching our fever this whole time," he said.

"Most of it," Fathom said, nodding slowly. "And it does so without making a single sound."

Fathom had learned about this slow-holding nature—what the older turtles called *thermal inertia*—from her wise grandfather. He was an ancient green turtle who spent his winters ferrying messages through the deep channels between the outer islands.

When Fathom was young, she had only cared about speed, loving the quick minnows and the sudden summer storms. Then came the year of the great heat, when the shallow reefs turned pale and silent under the sun. Up in the shallows, the water felt like warm soup, causing the fragile corals to bleach and die. But down in her grandfather’s deep channels, the water remained steady, dark, and wonderfully cool. The fish that fled the boiling shallows gathered in those quiet depths, hiding safely until the weather finally broke.

"Do you feel how quiet it is down here?" her grandfather had asked, his voice a low rumble. "Up there, the world is always swinging wildly from one extreme mood to another. Down here, we change slowly, and that slowness is not a weakness, little one. It is a keel that keeps the whole ocean steady."

Fathom had drifted beside him, watching the dim green light filter down from the chaotic surface far above. She felt her own racing heart slow down to match the steady, patient rhythm of the deep water.

"The one who changes slowly is the one everyone else can lean on," her grandfather had whispered. "Slow is not nothing happening; slow is holding."

But he had also warned her of the hidden cost of that great, patient strength.

03 Fathom
Fathom beat 3 of 5

"Remember," he had said, his old eyes cloudy but wise. "The deep keeps its promises late. If we are slow to warm, we are also slow to cool down again. Once the heat gets down here, we will hold it long after the sky has forgotten its anger."

Fathom swam to ClimateQuest during the season of the pale reefs, knowing they needed to understand the slow, quiet deep.

Cirrus met her at the rusted iron water-gate, where the sea met the sky in a spray of foam. Cirrus was a creature of the air, light and wispy, constantly shifting her shape like a high-altitude cloud.

"What is the ocean's role in all of this?" Cirrus asked, her voice like wind through dry grass.

Fathom swam to a shallow stone ledge and hauled her two glass jars out of the water.

"The ocean is the world's largest sponge," Fathom explained, nudging the massive gallon jug with her nose. "It absorbs both heat and carbon, taking in more than nine-tenths of the extra warmth from the sky. A massive portion of our extra carbon dioxide dissolves directly into the water, too."

"But because the ocean is so vast, it responds on a delay," Fathom continued, looking at the horizon. "The warmth we are feeling in the air today is actually the result of carbon we released decades ago, which the sea is only now passing back up. And the good things we do today will not show their true results for a long time, either."

Cirrus hovered over the jars, her pale face thoughtful as she processed the turtle's words. "That sounds like a dangerous trap, meaning the warming is already locked in and arriving late."

"It is only a trap if we lose our patience," Fathom said, her voice calm and steady. "The sea bought us precious decades by holding onto that heat when we needed it most. The delay is not a trick; it is a cushion, as long as we do not mistake slow to show for not working."

Cirrus looked down at the patient turtle, then back at the dark, rolling waves beyond the gate.

04 Fathom
Fathom beat 4 of 5

"You belong here," Cirrus said, her form settling into a gentle, mist-like drape over the stone. "Stay near the gate, because the fast ones are going to need someone who knows how to hold."

Fathom set up her workshop in a deep tide pool, a calm basin lined with purple sea anemones. The children who visited her were often the frantic, worried kind, their minds racing like wind on the water.

One afternoon, a girl with messy brown hair and a faded yellow backpack marched down to the pool.

"My school did everything right," the girl said, her voice shaking with a mix of anger and sadness. "We rode our bikes and stopped using plastic, but the news says the ocean is still getting warmer anyway. It feels like none of it is working, so why do we even bother trying?"

Fathom did not answer immediately, choosing instead to nudge the two glass jars she kept on the ledge.

"Sit here on the warm stone," Fathom said, her voice wrapping around the girl like a blanket. "Put one hand in the tiny jar, and then put your other hand in the big one."

Her left hand went into the thimble-sized jar, and her right hand plunged into the heavy gallon jug.

"The little one is hot," the girl said, wiping her nose with her sleeve. "The big one just feels like normal, cool water."

"The same sun has been shining on both jars all morning," Fathom said, smiling gently. "But the big jar takes a long time to show any change at all. You are not failing, little one; you are simply standing in the middle of the delay."

The girl looked at her hands, then stared at the massive glass jug with a furrowed brow.

05 Closing
Fathom beat 5 of 5

"The warmth you feel in the air today was actually promised years ago," Fathom explained. "It comes from carbon that was already up there before you were even born. But the good work your school did today is being held by the ocean right now. It will hand that coolness back decades from now, to children who are not even born yet."

The girl stared into the deep jar, her breathing finally slowing to match the gentle tide.

"So the good work is actually happening," she whispered. "I just can't feel it yet."

"That is the hardest truth to accept," Fathom said, her dark eyes shining with ancient warmth. "The deep ocean keeps all of its promises late, both the worrying ones and the hopeful ones. If you quit because you cannot feel the change, you walk away right before the harvest arrives."

As the sun began to sink, the tide pool turned a quiet, metallic silver under the evening sky. The other children had gone home, but the girl came back alone and sat on the wet rocks.

"When it feels like all my effort just sinks and disappears," she said, "how do I keep going?"

Fathom floated in the center of the pool, her ancient eyes reflecting the first pale stars. She thought of her grandfather in the calm dark of the deep channels, holding steady through the storms.

"You have to remember that sinking is not the same as vanishing," Fathom said. "The sea takes what you give it, holds it close, and passes it along on its own clock. You will not always see the good things land, but the deep is still keeping time."

"Do the good work on the slow clock, and then let the deep carry it. That part of the journey was never yours to hurry."

The girl took a long, slow breath, letting her shoulders drop as she watched the water. Fathom watched the frantic tightness leave her face, replaced by the quiet calm of the pool.

The turtle did not say the rest aloud, but she knew it to be true down to her bones. The slow ones might look like they are doing nothing, but they are the keel of the world. They hold everything steady while the surface has its moods, keeping every promise until the time is right.

The ClimateQuest ensemble

Fathom is part of ClimateQuest's distributed-narrative cast. Each character embodies a different curricular primitive; together they teach the full subject.