Zelia slowly massaged her temples. On the laptop screen in front of her, a string of numbers confirmed that a massive wire transfer had just left her personal account. It was the final payment for a luxurious mansion tucked inside Tuxedo Park, one of the most exclusive gated communities in the Atlanta area, old money and stone walls just off West Paces Ferry.
The house wasn’t for her. It was for her mother-in-law, Odora. Zelia let out a long sigh, closed her laptop, and leaned back in her leather executive chair.
She sat alone in the corner office of a glass-and-steel high-rise overlooking Midtown Atlanta, Peachtree Street buzzing far below with traffic and Ubers and people rushing home from work. As the CEO of a successful high-end fashion export firm, Zelia was used to making multi‑million‑dollar decisions. But this decision was different.
There was a bitterness clinging to it that wouldn’t wash away. It had all started three months earlier. Her husband, Tavarius, had come to her with a pitiful look on his face.
Tavarius had always seemed like a good man, or so she thought, but he was far too submissive to his mother’s will. That night he sat next to Zelia on their Midtown penthouse couch, took her hand, and began the persuasion routine she knew too well. ‘Baby, Mother is getting old,’ he murmured.
‘Her lifelong wish is just to live in a decent house for the years she has left.’
Zelia stayed silent. The word decent, at least the version of ‘decent’ that Tavarius and his mother talked about, was highly relative. The condo where Odora lived now in Buckhead was already perfectly good by any normal standard: spacious, with a concierge, a pool, and a view of the Atlanta skyline.
But it was never enough for her. Odora had never liked Zelia. To her, Zelia was just a common woman who had gotten lucky in business.
Zelia’s status as a self‑made mogul, instead of being a source of pride, was something Odora resented. She believed that as a daughter‑in‑law, Zelia should hand over her earnings to her husband and mother‑in‑law to manage, the way some women in her church circle did. Naturally, Zelia had refused.
She had built her company with blood, sweat, and sleepless nights, and she wanted her money used for transparent purposes — not to fund someone else’s vanity. But Tavarius was her weakness. ‘What house are we talking about, honey?’ Zelia finally asked.