"Bury Me with My Tesla," Second Wife Demands — She Sends Men for It; Police and Court Shut It Down

"Bury Me with My Tesla," Second Wife Demands — She Sends Men for It; Police and Court Shut It Down

"Bury me with my Tesla Model X." The salon fell silent. The air smelled of hair spray and money. I held the will in one hand, my legal tone steady as I read the line aloud. A few women gasped. Across the marble floor, Ama Wellington clutched her Bible so tightly that her knuckles whitened.

White Tesla Model X with open falcon-wing doors parked near a grassy field at dusk.
A white Tesla Model X stands with its Falcon-wing doors open, showcasing its sleek design and spacious interior. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: pexels.com, @vladimirsrajber
Source: UGC

Her co-wife, Abena, tilted her sunglasses and smirked. "Bury him with what? In Cantonments? Please."

The staff exchanged nervous glances.

I cleared my throat. "These are the written wishes of the late Mr James Wellington."

Abena rose from her seat. The gold bangles on her wrist chimed. "You're not serious, Lawyer. That car belongs to my children. He bought it after we married."

Ama whispered, "Let his words be honoured. He made a vow."

Abena's voice cracked through the salon like glass breaking. "Vow? He left me to nurse him while you prayed! Now he wants to take a car to heaven?"

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The driver, Kwesi, who had been polishing the Tesla outside, froze mid-motion. He looked through the tinted glass, unsure whether to leave or listen.

"Please," I said, "let me finish reading."

Abena folded her arms. "No, continue. Let's see what other nonsense your master wrote."

Her words stung the air.

Two co-wives argue heatedly during a will reading.
Two women arguing during a heated family discussion. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: SDI Productions
Source: Getty Images

I continued. The next clause tightened the tension in the room: Mr Wellington had directed that the remainder of his estate be divided equally between the two wives and a list of orphanages in Eastern and Central Region.

The mention of charity drew gasps.

Abena laughed, sharp and disbelieving. "So strangers get our money?"

Ama bowed her head. "May his soul find peace."

The moment felt like a test, but not just of inheritance, but of dignity.

When I looked up from the paper, Abena's eyes met mine, cold and calculating. I saw greed taking its shape.

James Wellington had been an Accra tycoon, a man whose name carried weight from Accra Central to Airport Residential Area. He built his wealth through logistics and real estate, starting from a single warehouse in Tema Port.

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I met him a decade ago when he needed a lawyer to settle a land dispute. He was firm but kind. Over time, I became both his lawyer and confidant.

An elderly man gives his lawyer instructions beside his hospital bed.
An elderly man speaks with his lawyer at the hospital about estate matters. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: PixelCatchers
Source: Getty Images

Ama, his first wife, had stood by him during the early years. She was quiet, devout, and content with the little she had. Their marriage produced one son, Emmanuel, now a medical student abroad.

Abena came later, younger and glamorous. She was once a model, now known for her boutique in East Legon and her taste for luxury. The city called her "the queen of mirrors" because everything about her glittered, but nothing reflected depth.

When James fell ill at sixty-five, his two worlds collided under one roof. Ama returned to the mansion to pray for his recovery. Abena hired private nurses, sparing no expense. The tension between them could light up a generator.

I visited often to update his legal documents. During one visit, he smiled weakly and said, "Kwame, when I go, make sure my words stand. Even if they sound strange."

I nodded.

Two women stand apart at a funeral in Accra.
Mourners gather during a solemn funeral in Accra. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: Jacob Wackerhausen
Source: Getty Images

He gestured toward the Tesla parked outside his window. "That car gave me freedom when my legs began to fail. I want it to follow me home. Not because of vanity, but because I earned every kilometre."

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I took his instructions seriously. He insisted on writing the line himself. Later, he whispered, "If they quarrel, remind them that peace is my true gift."

Two weeks later, he died quietly in his sleep.

At the funeral, Ama dressed in white and prayed loudly. Abena appeared in black, with dark sunglasses, crying, though her eyes stayed dry. Guests whispered about who would inherit what.

When they scheduled the will reading at Abena's salon, I sensed trouble brewing. I arrived with extra copies, a witness, and a steady voice.

What I didn't realise was that the line about the Tesla would spark a battle that would pull in faith, pride, and even the driver.

A driver stands near a Tesla parked outside a city salon.
Chauffeur standing beside a luxury car outside a city salon. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: IIuri Krasilnikov
Source: Getty Images

The tension began even before I arrived that morning. Kwesi called me from outside the salon. "Sir, Maame Abena says she will not sit next to Maame Ama. She says the salon is hers, and she is the legal wife."

"Both will sit," I said. "By the law, they share equal recognition."

When I entered, Abena was already pacing. "Lawyer, we should do this at the house, not in public."

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"Your salon is neutral ground," I replied. "Let's begin."

Ama arrived a few minutes later, holding a small bottle of anointing oil. She greeted everyone softly, then sat down and whispered a prayer.

Abena rolled her eyes. "Praying won't give you the car."

Ama ignored her.

I opened the will and started reading from the top. When I reached the Tesla clause, the room erupted in chaos.

Abena laughed loudly. "This is madness! My husband loved that car. Why waste it underground?"

Ama's lips trembled. "He made a wish. We must obey."

A lawyer tries to calm two arguing women during a will reading.
Lawyer mediating between two women during a dispute in a beauty salon. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: kali9
Source: Getty Images

Abena snapped, "You call this obedience? This is witchcraft from jealous people!"

Kwesi, still outside, looked uneasy. He later told me he had overheard Abena instructing one of her cousins to "move the car tonight, before that pastor's wife claims it."

I paused my reading. "Maame Abena, no asset can be touched until probate concludes. Please respect that."

She smirked. "Probate or propaganda, that car is mine."

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Ama shook her head. "The earth is not our home. Let him rest as he wished."

Abena clapped her hands once. "Over my dead body!"

The staff exchanged nervous glances. I could feel the heat in the room rise like mid-afternoon sun.

I decided to read the subsequent clause to cool the air. That was when the room froze again.

"To the orphanages of St Mary's Home in Eastern Region and Mercy Centre in Cape Coast, I leave forty per cent of my remaining assets."

A lawyer reads the will to the benefactors.
People listen quietly as a lawyer reads legal documents. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: Maskot
Source: Getty Images

The silence was instant.

Abena's mouth opened, but no sound came.

"Forty per cent?" she finally said. "So, we get the scraps?"

"Those were his words," I said quietly.

Ama's eyes welled with tears. "He never forgot the children."

Abena pointed at me. "You and that pastor's wife planned this! Even the dead cannot rest in peace because of you people."

"Enough," I said firmly. "The law will decide. My duty is only to read."

But she wasn't done. "We'll see about that, Lawyer. No one buries my husband's car. I'll call the commissioner if I have to."

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As I packed the documents, I noticed Kwesi standing by the window, uneasy. Later that night, he would tell me what he saw Abena doing near the garage after everyone left.

The story was far from over.

Kwesi arrived at my office the next morning with trembling hands.

A woman near a Tesla at night.
A night scene showing a woman near a parked car. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: peepo
Source: Getty Images

"Sir, I couldn't sleep," he said. "Maame Abena brought men last night. They tried to start the Tesla. She told them to move it to her brother's house in Osu."

I clenched my jaw. "Did they succeed?"

"No, sir. The car wouldn't start. I think the battery died."

"Did she see you?"

"Yes. She told me, 'If you open your mouth, I'll make sure you join your boss underground.'"

I thanked him and called the community police liaison officer. Within hours, they sent a patrol to the Wellington mansion. The Tesla sat untouched, its sensors blinking like eyes that had seen too much.

Later that week, the probate hearing began. Abena stormed into court with her lawyer, declaring that the will was fraudulent and that someone had manipulated her late husband.

But when Kwesi took the stand, his testimony changed everything.

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A driver testifies in court while a judge listens.
Witness giving testimony in a courtroom during a civil hearing. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: gorodenkoff
Source: Getty Images

He revealed that during Mr Wellington's illness, Abena had repeatedly pressured him to transfer property documents. She had even forged the old man's signature on a cheque for GHS 3 million.

The courtroom gasped.

When shown the car key, Kwesi said quietly, "He told me the Tesla was a symbol. He said, 'Whoever tries to take it will expose their heart.'"

The judge leaned back, noting those words.

By the second hearing, new evidence surfaced: CCTV footage from the mansion showing Abena sneaking into the garage after midnight.

Her case collapsed.

Ama sat silently beside me, tears streaming down her face.

The court upheld the will in full.

Outside the court, reporters gathered like bees. Abena pushed through them, shouting that someone had framed her.

Ama whispered beside me, "The Lord fights for the silent."

The next morning, the Daily Graphic carried the headline: "Second Wife Loses Bid to Seize Late Tycoon's Car and Charity Funds."

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A covered vehicle is lowered beside a mausoleum during a symbolic burial.
Workers lowering a covered vehicle beside a family mausoleum. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: wuttipong charoensub
Source: Getty Images

For once, the truth outran the lies.

Weeks passed, and the estate settled into order. The Tesla, as per instructions, was buried beside the mausoleum on the family property. It was surreal watching a machine lowered like a coffin.

Abena refused to attend the burial and left the mansion soon after. Her boutique closed when debt overwhelmed it. Rumours said she fled to Dubai.

Ama stayed behind to oversee the charity disbursements. She worked closely with the orphanage directors, ensuring every Cedi reached its destination. Her grace turned public ridicule into respect.

One evening, she called me to the mansion. The air smelled of rain and earth.

"Lawyer Kwame," she said softly, "I used to envy her. But now I pity her. The car she wanted became her chain."

I nodded.

She continued, "When he said 'bury me with my Tesla', I thought it was pride. Now I see it was a prophecy. He wanted to teach us that nothing we own leaves this world with us."

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A faint glow of buried headlights in the dark.
The faint glow of car headlights in the dark. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: MD Shahjehan
Source: Getty Images

The headlights of the buried Tesla still faintly glowed through the soil, powered by its last reserve charge. It was eerie, like a candle refusing to die.

"Do you think she'll ever apologise?" I asked.

Ama smiled sadly. "Pride and peace cannot live in the same house."

By the next month, the foundation named after James Wellington began operations. It funded school uniforms, medical bills, and small grants for widows. Kwesi became the foundation driver, finally treated with the dignity he had long earned.

One Sunday, I found him cleaning the new Toyota Hilux. He grinned. "Sir, this one, no one will bury."

We laughed.

Ama's health began to fade, but her peace grew stronger. On her final visit to my office, she handed me a letter sealed with wax.

"Read this when I am gone," she said.

Months later, I did. It said: 'Thank you for defending truth when others chose sides. Remind them that honour is not noise; it is obedience in hard moments.'

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A lawyer reads a sealed letter under warm office light.
A man reads a handwritten letter at his desk in a quiet office. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: Dragos Condrea
Source: Getty Images

Looking back, I realise the line "Bury me with my Tesla" was never about wealth. It was a mirror held up to human desire.

When James wrote those words, he was not clinging to possessions but exposing hearts. He knew the living would fight harder for the symbols of power than for peace itself.

Abena saw a car. Ama saw obedience. The world saw madness. But I saw wisdom disguised as folly.

In Accra, people measure love by what they inherit, not what they preserve. Yet the true inheritance is character.

The case taught me that greed often sounds like entitlement wrapped in grief. It shouts, while integrity speaks in whispers.

Ama's quiet faith triumphed because it aligned with purpose. Abena's downfall came from mistaking glamour for grace.

Each time I pass the Wellington property and see the small plaque that reads "Buried with His Freedom", I remember that the worth of a legacy is not in what lies above the ground but what remains in the heart.

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A peaceful Accra mansion garden at sunrise.
A sunrise view of an Accra mansion garden at sunrise. For illustrative purposes only. Photo: Rosmarie Wirz
Source: Getty Images

As for me, I now tell my clients: "Write your will as a lesson, not just a list."

Because someday, when greed rises again in another salon or boardroom, someone will read a line that tests not the law but the soul.

So I ask you, reader: if your words outlive you, will they expose greed or inspire grace?

This story is inspired by the real experiences of our readers. We believe that every story carries a lesson that can bring light to others. To protect everyone's privacy, our editors may change names, locations, and certain details while keeping the heart of the story true. Images are for illustration only. If you'd like to share your own experience, please contact us via email.

Source: YEN.com.gh

Authors:
Chris Ndetei avatar

Chris Ndetei (Lifestyle writer) Christopher Ndetei is a writer who joined the Yen team in May 2021. He graduated from Machakos Technical College in 2009 with a Diploma in ICT and has over four years of experience in SEO writing. Christopher specialises in lifestyle and entertainment coverage, with a focus on biographies, life hacks, gaming, and guides. He has completed the AFP course on Digital Investigation Techniques (2023) and earned the Google News Initiative Certificate (2024). In recognition of his work, he was named Yen Writer of the Year in 2024. You can connect with him via email at chrisndetei@gmail.com.