The inner lining
Benjamin has a silver puffer jacket he bought with his first steady paycheck from Environment and Climate Change Canada. Shiny nylon, high collar, zip usually open. The inner lining has a motor grease stain that doesn't show from the outside. He hasn't tried to clean it. Not laziness: the stain is from fixing the generator at the Isachsen station during a storm that left him stuck alone for five days. The grease is a reminder that he solved that without help.
Underneath the puffer he always wears a light gray cotton sweatshirt, round neck, no hood. He has two identical ones. When one is in the wash, he wears the other. He doesn't like there to be a day without that middle layer, the one between skin and the outer nylon. It's his second lining.
Benjamin works as a maintenance technician for remote weather stations in the Queen Elizabeth archipelago, in the Canadian High Arctic. He spends two thirds of the month on the road: Twin Otter, snowmobile, prefab huts with a generator and minimal heating. The remaining third, in his Iqaluit apartment, heating at seventeen degrees and the window always open a crack. In both places, the gray sweatshirt is the constant.







