The $2.1 Million Villa Lawsuit That Exposed a Family’s Secret-haohao

Kendall Price learned numbers before she learned how to defend herself. In the Price house, math was never just math. It was rent, payroll, bills, cash drawers, and the difference between what Gerald Price said happened and what actually did.

By the time she was twelve, Kendall carried a silver TI-84 calculator in her backpack like other children carried lip gloss or trading cards. The number seven would one day rub blank from years of pressure, but back then it still clicked cleanly beneath her thumb.

Gerald Price liked to tell people he had built Price Family Cleaners from nothing. East Atlanta believed him. He shook hands at church, smiled at Rotary Club lunches, and stood beside his metallic-blue Ford F-150 like success had a paint color.

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What people did not see was Kendall in the back office after school, sitting under fluorescent lights while washers roared through the wall. The room smelled of detergent, hot metal, and paper dust from old invoices stacked too high.

She closed books before she had a driver’s license. She tracked vendor payments before she could vote. By twenty-two, she handled payroll, taxes, leases, employee schedules, machine repairs, and the numbers Gerald later called his own brilliance.

Her father called her “the spine of this family.” For years, Kendall thought that meant he loved her. It took too long to understand that some compliments are just job descriptions wearing Sunday clothes.

Gerald paid her in envelopes. At first, it was $400 a month left on the kitchen counter. Later, after she helped grow the business to nearly $900,000 in revenue, he raised it to $500 and acted generous.

“See?” he would say. “I take care of my family.”

Kendall never argued in front of him. She wrote it down instead. Every envelope. Every month. Every hour she worked without a paystub, benefits, tax withholding, or a thank-you that could be deposited anywhere.

Bonnie Price, her mother, had a softer voice and a harder sentence. “Honey, family doesn’t keep score,” she would say whenever Kendall asked why her labor had no real value.

But Kendall knew better. Keeping score was not cruelty. It was proof. It was the only defense against people who waited until later, then tried to turn memory into fog.

The break came in spring, while Kendall was preparing the tax return. She found cash deposits that should have existed and did not. At first, she checked again. Then a third time. Then the pattern became impossible to explain away.

Thousands of dollars moved through machines and never reached the bank. Not once. Not randomly. Week after week, location after location, the missing cash sat in the records like a hole covered by clean carpet.

Kendall prepared a six-page report. Color-coded. Highlighted. Each missing deposit tied to a date, a store, and a shift. She carried it into the back office of the Covington Highway laundromat and placed it in front of Gerald.

“Dad,” she said carefully, “this is tax fraud.”

Gerald barely glanced at it. “It’s cash management.”

“It’s unreported income. My name is on those returns.”

“Your signature is on my business.”

That sentence did what shouting never could. It clarified the room. Kendall realized Gerald did not see her name as her name. He saw it as a tool, something he could place wherever it served him.

She told him she would not sign the next return. Three weeks later, Gerald replaced her with Amber, the younger sister he adored and funded through college while she changed majors three times.

Amber did not understand the business. She thought accounts receivable sounded like an email folder. But she did understand Gerald’s approval, and that was the only qualification he cared about.

Gerald did not tell Kendall she was fired. He said, “You’re not needed anymore.”

Kendall opened her black college-ruled notebook, turned to the last page, and wrote one final number: $189,000. Total compensation. Seven years, three months, fourteen days.

Then she placed the notebook in her bag, picked up the old TI-84 calculator, and walked out. She did not slam the door. She did not beg. She did not warn him what would happen without her.

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