The morning after mother's burial, we had planned to go to a storage facility in the next fjord, she had been renting storage space there for a few years.
With the van being empty now, the plan had been to go there and fill it with whatever had been in storage and drive with it south to hand it over to the local county museum for processing.
One of mother's last wishes was that her collections of collections would be donated to a place where they would become an exhibit. I sometimes think that in her mind she had been envisioning a whole museum dedicated to just her art and collections, and was feverishly working to collect enough things to fill it up before her time was up.
During her last days in the hospital, while she was still conscious, she had had a couple of visits from a couple that ran a local boarding house that had expressed an interest in her collections and that wanted her to sign a document that they said would ensure that the legacy of her art would be secured.
She described them to me as friends she had known for a few months that were very interested in all of her art and anything she had been doing and that they wanted to make sure that it was displayed somewhere for all the world to see.
I asked them kindly in an email to stop doing this after I got their contact details from her, and also told them that she had already committed to donating her collections to the local county museum.
A couple of days later when I went to visit her, she told me the couple had been there again, earlier that morning, and showed me the document that they had given her to sign. They had already signed it.
When I read through it, the document was essentially granting them permissions to enter any and all facilities where she might have any possessions stored and to pick out whatever items or valuables they were interested in while leaving everything else behind.
In essence, legalized grave robbery of the dying.
I asked her closest friends about the couple and did some digging myself. From what I could see and hear this was something they had been practicing for a long time and probably still are doing today. There were breadcrumb trails showing that they were mostly just interested in valuables that could be sold or used as decorations in their boarding house business, they were usually only reaching out to older people that were nearing the end of their journey.
I called them and told them in less uncertain terms that they were not welcome to continue their efforts, that mother was dying and not in any condition to sign any legal documents and nothing she signed at this point would be legally binding nor did we want to spend our last few days with her doing what they were proposing.
They didn't attempt to push this further before her death, but I got an email from them shortly afterwards expressing their condolences and then asking for the same thing again.
I told them again that all her collections would be going to the local county museum. Thankfully, I never heard from them again.
We drove through the tunnels connecting the two fjords and did some sight-seeing along the way, visiting the places mother and her siblings had grown up in as my grandparents had lived in the other fjord a few years while he was working there as the director of one of the first small dams that provided electricity to the local power grid.
When we finally arrived at the storage facility, the owner sounded and looked less than thrilled at our arrival. Maybe that was how he always was, but the feeling I got was that we weren't welcome.
Thankfully, in the small community of the fjords - everyone is either related or knows the person, my uncle knew him and that was enough to proceed.
When we finally arrived at the oversized storage facility she had rented, disaster struck. I didn't have the right keys with me and we couldn't open the door.
I first asked the storage facility owner if he could open it, but he refused as he said it could be illegal for him to do that even if it sounded very illogical to me.
I then tried pleading, and finally raging, all falling on deaf ears.
It doesn't matter if he was wrong or right or had ulterior motives, it was frustrating to not be able to complete what mother had asked for when all that was separating us from it was a fragile door with a flimsy lock.
In my rage, I was seriously considering kicking it in and just being done with it, to hell with the consequences. Thankfully, reason prevailed and I swallowed my disappointment and we left with the verbal agreement that we or someone else would return with the correct keys and that would be the end of it.
I realized my son was watching all of this take place but I can at least take comfort today in that he didn't have to witness his father going further than raising his voice in anger during this.
In retrospect, we would in any case probably not have been able to fit but a fraction of all the treasures she had accumulated in the storage room into the large van we had outside. Without access to it, there was however no way for us to realize the futility of attempting it and the bitter disappointment of failure felt heavy to me as we traveled back to the other fjord and prepared to drive back south.
When we returned back home, I found the correct keys and arranged with the museum beneficiaries to hand it over to them, as they had access to a large truck that was going north to pick up some other donated items from other benefactors.
I later heard from the museum curator that the driver had finally gotten access to it, using the correct keys, but that the sheer volume of things in there was way beyond what he could possibly fit into a single delivery truck so he had filled it up to the brim but had to leave some things behind.
She sent me pictures showing what it had contained, what struck me was that in the midst of the clutters of things were a mattress and a lamp that suggested mother had used the storage room as sleeping quarters when she had been arranging different exhibits in or around the fjords. I always wondered but never asked where she had been staying on those trips, sometimes for days or weeks. Now I know.My uncle was thankfully able to pick up what remained and empty the storage completely of her things, the remnants being random items that either ended up on the garbage heap or were donated to the local Red Cross facilities.
I talked to the curator for a few more minutes about the journey and what their future plans for the collections would be, she was completely overwhelmed by the amount of objects they now had ownership of and was at a loss of words for what they would do with it or when they would be able to do it. A lifetimes worth of someone's memories and desires framed into collections of assorted treasures that had no monetary value but priceless to them from a sentimental perspective.2 years later, the curator sent me an email again. They were having a display at the local museum this weekend and one of the exhibits would be from a small part of my mother's collections.
Good bye mother, I hope you were able to attend this and saw the beauty of what we did to honor your memory.