Hot Daddy_A Romantic Comedy Read online




  Hot Daddy

  Billionaire Bachelors: Book 2

  Lila Monroe

  Lila Monroe Books

  Contents

  Copyright

  Hot Daddy

  Also by Lila:

  Prologue

  1. Jules

  2. Jules

  3. Las Vegas, Three Years Earlier

  4. Cal

  5. Jules

  6. Jules

  7. Jules

  8. Las Vegas, Three Years Earlier

  9. Cal

  10. Jules

  11. Jules

  12. Jules

  13. Jules

  14. Cal

  15. Jules

  16. Jules

  17. Jules

  18. Jules

  19. Jules

  20. Cal

  21. Jules

  22. Cal

  23. Jules

  Epilogue

  Lucky in Love Series

  The Billionaire Bargain

  About the Author

  Also by Lila:

  Copyright 2018 by Lila Monroe

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including emailing, photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.

  This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Hot Daddy

  Billionaire Bachelors: Book 2

  Playboy CEO, Cal McAdams, lives life in the fast lane: hot women, hotter deals, and… a fake fiancee? I signed on to help reform his reckless image and win custody of his god-children, but I wasn’t expecting to come face-to-face (and mouth-to-mouth) with my wild Vegas hook-up from three years ago.

  AKA, 6”3 of tanned muscle, sharp suits, and ‘undress me’ eyes.

  AAKA, the best thigh-clenching, bed-shaking sex of my life.

  AAAKA, the man who couldn’t be more off-limits if he had a uranium belt wrapped around his, um, assets.

  I’ve never been one to break the rules, but Cal has me wanting to rip them up - and roll around naked on the scrap paper. But with just three weeks to turn this bachelor into a DILF, can we keep our crazy chemistry from derailing his plans? Or will gold-digging relatives, rambunctious pre-teens, and a little thing called love leave us both crashed out of the race?

  Find out in the new sexy, hilarious romantic comedy from Lila Monroe!

  Billionaire Bachelors Series:

  1. Very Irresistible Playboy

  2. Hot Daddy

  3. Wild Card Card (June)

  4. Man Candy (Aug)

  Also by Lila:

  Billionaire Bachelors Series:

  1. Very Irresistible Playboy

  2. Hot Daddy

  3. Wild Card

  4. Man Candy

  The Billionaire Bargain series

  The Billionaire Game series

  Billionaire with a Twist series

  Rugged Billionaire

  Snowed in with the Billionaire (holiday novella)

  The Lucky in Love Series:

  1. Get Lucky

  2. Bet Me

  3. Lovestruck

  4. Mr Right Now

  5. Perfect Match

  6. Christmas with the Billionaire

  ***

  Want more sexy romantic comedy reads?

  Sign up for my mailing list and receive a FREE copy of my novel RUGGED BILLIONAIRE.

  CLICK HERE to claim your book.

  ***

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  https://www.bookbub.com/authors/lila-monroe

  1

  Jules

  Don’t get me wrong, I’m a fan of the male, umm, anatomy. Big ones, small ones (okay, not so small), thick and thicker. Even that guy from Constitutional Law 101 in college who veered slightly to the left . . . I’m just saying, when I get up close and personal with a guy’s assets, I know how to have a good time.

  Best cock forward, so to speak.

  But there’s a time and a place to throw your penis party. And seven thirty p.m. on a Thursday night, while I’m stuck working late in the office Xeroxing deposition transcripts?

  RSVP: Nope.

  “What the fuck?” I squawk, as fourth-year associate Tommy Milstein lurches towards me, his pale, limp dick swinging free from his unzipped pants. “Put that thing away!”

  “Relax, Jules,” he grins, leering at me. “Nobody’s around.”

  “Um, hello? Somebody, right here.”

  I slam the photocopier shut and stride back across the office, my hands shaking with shock—and anger. I should have guessed he’d pull a sleazy stunt like this. Out of everyone at the office, Tommy would be voted Most Likely to Sexually Harass. His crimes are well-known around the office: brushing up against you in the elevator, staring down the assistants’ blouses, sending sexist memes from his company email—and that’s just the stuff everybody knows about. Word is that he cornered a first-year associate at the holiday party last year and propositioned her for sex in exchange for better cases. And not just regular, “lie back and think of England” sex, but a three-way with his racquetball partner, while dressed as Daenerys Targaryen from Game of Thrones.

  Unfortunately, since Tommy also puts the Milstein in Harper, Wells & Milstein—he’s the managing partner’s son—nobody’s been able to go Red Wedding on the creep. I’ve steered clear of him, but we’ve been working on a case together the last few weeks, and apparently emailing sweet nothings like I think we should be able to file by Friday and Do you want to circle back with the client or should I? were basically an open invitation to drop trou and show me the best that his gene pool has to offer.

  Spoiler alert: not much.

  I get to my desk and start shoving files in my briefcase, but not fast enough. Tommy saunters over, holding his pants up with one hand. “Come on, Jules,” he says, offering me a grin—lopsided, the kind that he must think is charming. “We both know there’s something going on here.”

  “Unless that ‘something’ is me recoiling from you in total disgust, then no,” I tell him with a glare. “Now zip your pants up and get the fuck out of my way before I start screaming for security.”

  Tommy’s grin twists into a nasty scowl; he shoves himself back inside his fly without bothering to button up. “There’s no reason to be such a bitch about it,” he snaps.

  “There’s no reason to flash your fucking junk like a pervert on the subway, but clearly, we’re way past logic right now,” I retort.

  Tommy’s eyes narrow. “I’d watch that mouth if I were you, Jules.” He takes a step toward me, and I feel myself tense. The guy is a skinny weasel but you never know with assholes like this. “Do you even care about your position here? I bet my dad would be real interested to hear about your attitude problem.”

  He takes another step, backing me up against the desk, and I sigh.

  “I really didn’t want to have to do this,” I tell him sadly.

  And then I punch him in the face.

  “Are you serious?” my best friend Kelly demands the next afternoon at Bicycle Bar, a narrow, slightly mildewy-smelling haunt on the Lower East Side. We were regulars here back in our law school days, when we had a standing date for 2-for-1 fireball shots on Tuesday nights. Three years later, it’s still our favorite place to meet in any kind of emotional emergency. Droopy Christmas lights shaped like chili peppers hang above the dusty liquor bottles; a chalkboard hawks $4 Bud Lights and pickleback specials. It’s a total dive—one we’re way too old for at this point—but at least I know I won’t run into anyone from the firm. “They fired you?”

  “I
t wasn’t so much a firing as the not-so-gentle suggestion that I resign.” I slouch miserably on my ripped barstool. “To be fair, I broke another employee’s cheekbone.”

  “Sure, in self-defense,” Kelly says, waving her hand dismissively. “Did they miss the part where he was swinging his fucking dick around by the Xerox machine?”

  “Did you miss the part where he’s the managing partner’s son?” I sigh. “I’m a third-year associate, Kel. It’s my own fault. I mean, not the dick-swinging, obviously,” I clarify quickly. “But it’s not like I didn’t know what kind of company I was working for. Harper Wells is basically the evil corporation from a superhero movie. I can’t very well act surprised.”

  Kelly narrows her eyes. “Can we sue?”

  “I mean, we could,” I say, loving her even more for her use of the first-person plural. Kelly and I have been best friends since the first day of law school, when I slipped into the last row of the lecture hall with my heart pulsing in the back of my throat. Everybody else in the class looked like they’d willingly throw me in front of a subway car if it would somehow improve their grade, but Kelly just smiled and held up a baggie full of Cheerios. “I brought snacks,” she whispered, like she’d known me forever. Right away, it felt like she had.

  “But it’s a total he-said she-said situation,” I continued. “And if I know them at all they’ll do everything they can to make me look deranged—which, spoiler alert, is not exactly something other firms look for in potential employees. They’re counting on it feeling like more trouble than it’s worth, and the grossest part is that they’re actually right.”

  “That is so unfair.” Kelly considers the tiny bowl of peanuts on the bar between us before shoving them away in disgust. “Well, if we can’t turn this into an opportunity to smash the patriarchy, at the very least I hope his nose bled a lot.”

  “Oh, yeah,” I grin, thanking the universe for a mom who taught my sister and me how to throw a hell of a right hook. “It gushed. I heard from my assistant he’s going to need a plastic surgeon to repair his weaselly face.”

  Kelly grins. “Atta girl.”

  The hipster bartender nods in our direction. “You ladies ready for another round?”

  “Yes, please.” I order a tequila and soda with extra lime, barely resisting the urge to tell him to just bring the bottle. I turn to Kelly, motioning to the highball glass she’s been nursing since I got here. “What is that, a vodka tonic?”

  Kelly hesitates. “It’s a seltzer water, actually.” She takes a deep breath. “So, this is not how I was planning to tell you,” she says, then trails off and casts a meaningful look down at her belly.

  “What!” My mouth drops open in shock and delight, my train wreck of a professional life momentarily forgotten. “Are you serious?”

  “Due in May,” she admits, before lifting her palms in a dorky approximation of jazz hands. “Surprise!”

  “Kelly!” I hop up off my barstool, flinging my arms around her and squeezing tight. “Are you kidding me? How did you not say anything this whole time? Oh my God, I can’t believe you’re pregnant and you let me take you to Bicycle Bar.”

  Kelly laughs at that. “I’m sorry,” she exclaims. “It just felt weird and kind of bitchy to be strolling in here with good news when—”

  “Are you kidding me?” I wave her off. “Don’t even start. Come on, you know that’s not how our friendship works. Oh, Kel, I’m so happy for you.”

  “I’m so happy,” she admits, a little shyly. “And completely terrified, clearly. I don’t feel remotely qualified to be somebody’s mother.”

  “Oh stop it,” I say, accepting my own drink from the bartender. “You’re going to be amazing. Phil too. This kid hit the parental jackpot.”

  Kelly claps a palm over her face, peeking at me from between her fingers. “Does this mean I’m an actual grown-up now?”

  I laugh, dragging her hand away. “I mean, I hate to tell you this, but you’re twenty-eight. You’ve got a hot husband and a sweet job and a fantastic apartment on the Upper West Side. You were already the mayor of Adult Town—which, now that I say it out loud, I realize sounds like a creepy, badly lit neighborhood full of porn shops and glory holes, but you know what I mean.” I gesture around. “Not to mention the fact that, sincerely tragic as it is, it’s not like we’re closing this place down every night of the week anymore.”

  “Or buying all our party clothes off the sale rack at Forever 21,” Kelly says with a sigh.

  “Or eating Cinnamon Toast Crunch for dinner,” I add, “although, full disclosure, I actually did do that a couple of nights ago.”

  Kelly grins. “Or taking off on wild trips to Vegas.”

  “Oh my God.” Now it’s my turn to hide my face in my hands. Our post-grad weekend in Sin City feels like a hundred years ago now, the two of us dancing by the pool at the Bellagio and strolling the strip, cocktails in hand—me in a tight black mistake of a dress, catching the attention of a tall, handsome mistake of a stranger. Even now, the memory of that guy’s crooked smile—and his arms, and the rest of him—makes me blush. Still, there’s another part of me that misses how free I felt back then: wide-eyed and fresh out of law school, the whole world full of once-in-a-lifetime adventures waiting to be had.

  “Well, nothing for me to do but drink for both of us, I guess,” I tell Kelly now, raising my glass in her direction. “To new babies—and, oh please God, new jobs.”

  “To whatever’s next,” Kelly agrees, and we toast.

  2

  Jules

  Three weeks later, and I’m still waiting for my luck to change.

  “So,” I say brightly, smiling across my living room, “Alicia. Why don’t you tell me a little bit about yourself?”

  Alicia looks like I just asked her to explain string theory. She’s my third potential-roommate interview of the day, a Craigslist find with limp blonde hair and a moon-shaped face, wide-leg corduroys riding up over her Birkenstock clogs. She looks like she just got off the bus from Des Moines. The bad part of town.

  “Well,” she begins. “I’m studying seventeenth-century American horticulture at Columbia.”

  Of course she is. I force myself to listen while she tells me about her antique teapot collection, nodding in all the right places and silently cursing my old roommate Hallie for moving in with her dreamy boyfriend back in the spring. I’ve loved having the apartment to myself the last few months—who wouldn’t love sitting around in their underwear binge-watching The Great British Baking Show?—but my checking account is starting to groan under the pressure. And it’s not like the job offers are rolling in: after Penisgate, I sent my resume off to what seems like every Big Law Firm in New York (and a bunch of teeny-tiny firms too) and hoofed it to about a thousand networking events, but my phone hasn’t exactly been ringing off the hook.

  In fact, it’s more the “your line has been disconnected” kind of thing.

  “I wouldn’t be here very often,” Alicia finishes finally. “My boyfriend lives upstate, so I go to visit him most weekends.”

  “Oh,” I say, sitting up a little straighter. “Nice. Where is he, the Hudson Valley? Catskills?”

  “Sing Sing,” Alicia says pleasantly, like she’s talking about a picturesque vacation town and not one of New York State’s most notorious maximum-security prisons. “We met through a pen pal program.” She smiles. “He’s serving twenty-five years for a triple homicide, but he was framed. He’s innocent, of course.”

  “Of course,” I echo faintly. “Well, thanks for coming by. I’ll call you!”

  I show her out, locking the deadbolt behind her and banging my head lightly against the door. The worst part is, she’s one of the better candidates I’ve interviewed. Yesterday I met with a middle-aged accountant who had three ferrets as pets, and an IT bro at a startup who asked if I’d mind if his improv troupe rehearsed in the living room on Tuesdays and Thursdays. And they were both worlds better than the guy who measured the closet and asked if
the electric in this building could accommodate the wattage of a deep freezer. Because he liked plenty of storage space.

  There’s nothing for it but to put on my sweats (even though it’s two o’clock in the afternoon) and settle in for a good long wallow.

  I look around my apartment with a sigh. Could I bear to give it up? I’ve been burning through my savings covering all the rent, but every time I think about moving someplace cheaper, I want to cry. I love this apartment—the carefully preserved tin ceilings, the inlaid hardwood floors, even my cranky next-door neighbor Mrs. Comparato, who’s lived in this building since 1962 and is forever complaining loudly about my heels on the floor—but the sad truth is that unless something major changes ASAP, I’m not going to be able to stay.

  I wander into the tiny kitchen and peer into my mostly empty refrigerator, trying to figure out if I’m desperate enough to drown my sorrows in the half bottle of Midori left over from a party Hallie and I threw last Halloween, or if a schlep to Trader Joe’s is in order. Do I want to get hammered on bad cocktails or two-buck chuck? The modern woman’s dilemma. I’m considering a compromise trip to the bodega around the corner when my phone rings, the screen displaying a New York number I don’t recognize.