Ten below, window open
The Alek sweatshirt, Atlantic puffin, carries the portrait of the Grandi boat mechanic printed directly on the fabric. Alek repairs outboard engines and electrical systems of small fishing boats at the old harbor of Reykjavík. He wears a sleeveless denim vest over a knit sweater with yellow, white, and red stripes, and a black bandana wrapped around his neck that he pulls up when he needs to concentrate.
In his basement apartment in Vesturbær, eight minutes' walk from the workshop, the kitchen window is slightly open even when the thermometer reads ten below. Visitors complain. Alek doesn't close it. The cool, damp Atlantic air is what keeps him awake at six in the morning while he makes the coffee he'll take in his steel thermos. In Heimaey, the island in the Vestmannaeyjar where he grew up among eight hundred thousand pairs of puffins nesting on the cliffs, the wind never stopped. Total calm unsettles him, like a room with no sound. He needs that constant movement of air the way he needs to smell salt from the kitchen.
The black bandana he wears around his neck works as a border. At the Grandi workshop, when Alek pulls it up to his nose, his coworkers know not to talk to him. It's not hostility: when he's working on an electrical circuit or a cylinder head gasket, air on his face distracts him. It's a gesture he developed on his own, without thinking about it, and now it's part of how the workshop reads him. Bandana up: silence. Bandana down: you can ask. There's a burn scar on his right hand, from the thumb to the wrist, that he looks at when he thinks. A short circuit at nineteen taught him that bare wires don't warn you.







