Wild Card
by Lila Monroe
'The
Wedding Date’ gets a sexy twist in the new hilarious rom-com from Lila Monroe!
Is there anything worse than playing maid-of-honor to your bitchy college nemesis? Try it when she’s marrying your DAD! Olivia Chambers doesn’t know what she’s done to deserve this karmic retribution, but she needs a date to the wedding from hell - and fast. She’s used to matchmaking billionaires, but now she needs a Prince Charming of her own. Someone handsome and famous enough to make bridezilla and her minions drool with envy…
Someone like hottie ex-NFL star Ryan Callahan.
Ryan is looking for love. Well, the fake kind. He needs the perfect woman on his arm to woo investors for his superstar new business venture, but nobody is scoring that touchdown… until elegant, sophisticated Olivia comes to him with a proposition. She’ll play his perfect date - if he’ll play hers.
The deal is simple! Or is it? Take one week in the Florida Keys, a dose of sizzling sexual tension, a madcap wedding, and some seriously humid frizzy hair, and Ryan and Olivia have the recipe for disaster… or maybe the time of their lives.
But can Olivia let down her guard long enough to let Ryan sweep her off her feet? And will Ryan take his eyes off the (business) prize long enough to see what’s right in front of him?
Find out in the hot, delicious new novel from Lila Monroe!
BILLIONAIRE BACHELORS SERIES:
1 Very Irresistible Playboy
2 Hot Daddy
3 Wild Card (June 2018)
4 Man Candy (Aug 2018)
Is there anything worse than playing maid-of-honor to your bitchy college nemesis? Try it when she’s marrying your DAD! Olivia Chambers doesn’t know what she’s done to deserve this karmic retribution, but she needs a date to the wedding from hell - and fast. She’s used to matchmaking billionaires, but now she needs a Prince Charming of her own. Someone handsome and famous enough to make bridezilla and her minions drool with envy…
Someone like hottie ex-NFL star Ryan Callahan.
Ryan is looking for love. Well, the fake kind. He needs the perfect woman on his arm to woo investors for his superstar new business venture, but nobody is scoring that touchdown… until elegant, sophisticated Olivia comes to him with a proposition. She’ll play his perfect date - if he’ll play hers.
The deal is simple! Or is it? Take one week in the Florida Keys, a dose of sizzling sexual tension, a madcap wedding, and some seriously humid frizzy hair, and Ryan and Olivia have the recipe for disaster… or maybe the time of their lives.
But can Olivia let down her guard long enough to let Ryan sweep her off her feet? And will Ryan take his eyes off the (business) prize long enough to see what’s right in front of him?
Find out in the hot, delicious new novel from Lila Monroe!
BILLIONAIRE BACHELORS SERIES:
1 Very Irresistible Playboy
2 Hot Daddy
3 Wild Card (June 2018)
4 Man Candy (Aug 2018)
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Chapter One
When you’ve lived in New
York as long as I have, you start to accept the fact that there are certain
undeniable truths about life in this city.
1) Carrie Bradshaw never
could have afforded that apartment on a journalist’s salary.
2) Unless your idea of
Sunday Funday is a teary three p.m. orange-juice hangover, unlimited mimosa
brunch is never a good idea.
And 3) this city—and,
let’s face it, basically the whole world—is set up for couples. Everything is
easier if you’re one half of a pair. Rent is cheaper. Battling the mobs at the
grocery store on a weekend is less soul-crushing. And the odds of dying one of
those grim, Daily News-type deaths where
nobody knows you’re gone until the neighbors start to notice a funny smell from
down the hallway? Way less likely when there’s someone around to catch the
stench and stop kitty from eating your face.
Most of us try to find
our other half the old-fashioned way: looking for true love. A partner to fill
our lives with joy—or, at the very least, someone to slump in front of Netflix
with on a Friday night and stop us from eating a whole block of cheese alone.
(Not that I’ve done that. Not at all.) But what happens if that hasn’t worked
out for you just yet, but you still need someone on your team?
Well, if you’re wealthy,
and connected enough to know the number—you call me.
The Agency specializes
in matchmaking . . . of the fake variety.
I’m not aiming to find my clients true love (although, that seems to be a side
benefit for a few of them these days), just a true partner-in-crime. Need a
fake fiancée to get your interfering relatives off your case? I’m your woman.
Old-school workplace treating you like a brazen hussy because you’re not
coupled up? I’ll find a partner for that work retreat that your boss will
adore. I’m discreet, professional, and I have a knack for finding just the
right match to get your through that tough spot. After all, everyone deserves
someone to have their back, even the weirdos.
Especially the weirdos.
“So,
I think I’ve got all the information I need,” I say now, smiling across my desk
at today’s client. Jason is the newly-flush CEO of a tech startup that was just
bought out by Google, and he needs a date to bring to a company-wide retreat in
the Berkshires. Though most my clients are just too busy—or too famous—to find
themselves the right date, with Jason I’m pretty sure it’s got more to do with
his twenty-dollar haircut and his habit of peppering every conversation with
arcane trivia from Star Trek. “I
should be able to find someone with an advanced degree in a STEM field and an
interest in . . .” I double-check my
notes. “Traditional Latvian folk music.”
“That’s
great,” Jason says, smiling eagerly. He can’t be more than twenty-two, and the
fact that he has no idea how to handle his newfound fortune is achingly
obvious. At our very first meeting, he parked his brand-new Maserati in a tow
zone in front of my office and had to take a cab all the way to Coney Island to
get it back.
“In the meantime, I want
you to go see my friend Lucas down at Bergdorf’s,” I tell him. There’s no way I’m
about to send this guy out into the world in his Pac-Man T-shirt and
Birkenstocks, no matter how rich he
is. After all, I’ve got a reputation to protect. “And I’ve had my assistant
Alice make you an appointment at a great salon.”
“Sounds good,” Jason
says, nodding like a bobblehead. Then his face clouds. “There is one more thing
I’m looking for in a date,” he says, suddenly nervous. “And I think it might be
a little . . . unorthodox.”
“Oh?”
I try to keep my face neutral. I have to explain to new clients, gently but
firmly, that I’m not running that
kind of agency. In fact, I have strict rules about romantic activities—they’re totally forbidden.
Jason
takes a deep breath. “I’m looking for someone with experience as a Dungeon
Master.”
Oh, yikes. “Unfortunately that’s not part of
the suite of services we offer here,” I say carefully, “but I’d be happy to
give you the card of an extremely discreet dominatrix who operates a private
club on the Lower East Side, and I’m sure she’ll be able to—”
All at once Jason sits
bolt upright in his chair. “Wait wait wait,” he interrupts, turning the color
of a late-summer tomato. “A dominatrix? What are you talking about?”
I frown. “Isn’t that
what you just—?”
“A Dungeon Master,” he says witheringly. “Like, for Dungeons and
Dragons.”
“Oh. Oh!” I feel my face
flush to match his. “Of course. I didn’t realize—”
“Jeez,” he interrupts,
looking at me like possibly I’m the
perv here. “What kind of operation are you running?”
I spend the next twenty
minutes reassuring him that we’re on the up and up, then show him out and turn
to my assistant, Alice, who’s sitting behind the reception desk typing away at
her computer, her dark hair in a tidy Audrey Hepburn topknot at the crown of
her head. “How was that?” she asks,
raising her eyebrows.
“Oh, you know.” I
stretch as Thor, our cranky ginger cat hops down off the filing cabinet and
prowls across the Persian rug. I bend down to scratch him behind his mangy
ears. “Just another day in the coal mines. You can knock off early,” I say,
straightening up and smoothing my pencil skirt. “I’ve got a lunch across town,
and then I’m just going to take the rest of the day.”
Alice
tilts her head to the side. “Hot date?” she asks.
“I
wish,” I say, plucking my jacket off the brass coat rack in the corner. “My dad’s
in town.”
I’m running late, so I take
a car across town to the Palace Hotel, where my dad likes to stay every time he’s
in New York. My phone rings while we’re stopped in traffic, and I grimace when
I see the caller ID.
“Hi, Ryan,” I say,
hoping the eye-roll isn’t too obvious in my voice. Ryan Callahan is one of my
most difficult, demanding clients. And not because he isn’t attractive. The
polar opposite, actually. He was a star quarterback for a pro football team
until an injury to his Achilles tendon cut his career short three years ago.
Since then he’s had his hand in all kinds of different businesses—sports
drinks, fitness apps, even a sneaker line—and his combination of brains and
brawn should make him an easy match—if I was just looking for a real date. But
the guy needs someone to help him schmooze with investors, and he’s ridiculously picky. He’s auditioned
nearly my entire roster, but nobody is good enough. Ryan may be rich and
handsome—OK, he’s hot as all get out, with the kind of broad, hard body you
want to climb like a mountain—but he’s proving to be a Kilimanjaro-sized pain
in my ass.
“Hey, Olivia,” he says,
his easygoing voice hiding what I know is an iron will. “We need to talk.”
“Of course,” I reply. “I’m
glad you called. Tell me more about why you didn’t like Amy?” And Tessa, and Claire, and Erin, I silently
add.
“It’s not that I didn’t like her, exactly,” Ryan says as the car
pulls up in front of the hotel. I scoot out of the backseat, smiling at the
doorman as I slip through the revolving door and head for the lobby. The Palace
is quintessential old New York, with marble floors and crystal chandeliers, the
smell of lilies heavy in the air. “She was fine,” Ryan continues. “But I need
the perfect wingwoman, you know? This investor meeting is a huge deal.”
“No, I know it is,” I
promise, wanting to head him off at the pass before he launches into his
pitch—again. He’s trying to raise capital to launch a chain of health food
kiosks, and his potential investor is an old-school finance guy, so to make a
good impression he needs someone smart and sophisticated. Which, for the
record, all my girls are. But none of them have passed muster with Captain
America over here. And the truth is I’m starting to run out of options.
“There’s a woman named Lauren I want you to
meet,” I tell him now, climbing the wide carpeted steps that lead to the lobby.
“She’s an executive assistant at a gallery downtown—very smart, very culturally
savvy. I’ll have Alice make you a dinner reservation for this weekend.”
“If you say so,” Ryan
says, sounding uncertain. “I just think . . .”
I lose the rest of his
sentence in the loud buzzing that suddenly fills my ears as I turn the corner
into the lobby—and catch sight of a familiar woman strolling across the plush
oriental rug.
“Shit,” I blurt, stopping in my tracks and scooting behind a massive
floral arrangement before she can see me. My heart jackhammers violently
against my ribs as I peek out and check I wasn’t just hallucinating.
But nope. There she is.
Vanessa Simpson, my psycho college roommate in the flesh. A lot of flesh. She’s
sashaying through the lobby in a flimsy sundress with a Birkin bag slung over
one arm.
Ryan breaks off.
“Olivia?” he says. “Are you OK?”
“Um, yup,” I promise
distractedly, darting behind a bellman pushing a loaded luggage cart across the
lobby. “Completely. I’m listening.”
He
keeps talking, but I peek through a couple of garment bags to watch Vanessa,
who’s stalking across the lobby like she thinks it’s a runway. She was my
roommate freshman year and made my life a living hell. There were the normal
roommate annoyances, sure—the clothes-stealing, the messiness, the loud hookups
so I had to sleep with earplugs and an eye mask in case she came stumbling back
at two a.m. with a guy and stripped naked right up against the door. (Twice.)
And then there were the next-level
stunts, the kind that took her from “selfish and spoiled” to “psycho in the
making.” Like casually wiping my finals papers from my laptop because, whoops,
she couldn’t figure out how to download the new Housewives episodes. Or the time I got a particularly gnarly zit on
my lip and she told everyone on our floor I had mouth herpes. It took me a week
to figure out why the RA kept offering to escort me to the health center.
If there was one silver
lining to living with a raging She-Demon like Vanessa, it was her big brother
Tristan, who was at school down at Princeton and took the train up to visit sometimes.
He always invited me out to dinner with the two of them, asking me about my
classes and what books I was reading. To say I had a crush on him was an
understatement—the truth is, I would have hitchhiked to New Jersey in a pair of
crotchless panties if he’d ever shown one tiny glimmer of interest. As it was,
I settled for stalking—ahem, scrutinizing
every post he made on social media and dreaming up elaborate fantasies in which
he rode up on a fiery steed—or a Toyota Corolla, whatever—and rescued me from
undergraduate hell.
But that was then. The
minute freshman year was over, I switched dorms and kept my distance from
Vanessa. I haven’t seen either one of them since graduation, and I fully intend
to keep it that way.
I skulk past the lobby
and into an alcove, then drag my focus back to the conversation. Ryan is a big,
important client, and I’m determined to find him someone who ticks all the
boxes. “Ashley will be perfect,” I tell him. “I think you two will really hit
it off.”
I hang up with Ryan and
peek around the corner to check the lobby. All clear. Vanessa is mercifully
gone—off to have her broomstick re-bristled, maybe, or to steal candy from a small
child with a terminal illness. I let out a sigh of relief and head into the
restaurant, where my dad is already seated at a table by the window, a glass of
Basil Hayden on the rocks sweating in his hand.
“Hi, Dad,” I say,
bending to kiss him on the cheek.
“Hiya, sweetheart.” My
dad retired down to Key West a few years ago and spends his days relaxing on
the beach and taking friends out on his fishing boat. But he’s still a
Northeasterner at his core and he makes his way back like a homing pigeon every
few months. “How you doing?”
I order a drink and we
spend a few minutes catching up. “Should we order?” I ask finally, glancing
down at the menu.
“In a minute,” my dad
says. “First, I’ve got news.”
I raise my eyebrows, I
can’t help it. Suddenly I know exactly
where this is going. “Let me guess,” I deadpan. “You’re getting married again?”
My dad makes an
exaggerated who, me? face. “Well,
hell, Livvie,” he says, sounding a little hurt. “When you say it like that you
make it sound as if I’ve got a new bride every week.”
Every couple of years,
more like. My mom died when I was in
high school, and ever since then my dad has gone through wives like other men
go through undershirts. Whoever this woman is, she’ll be new stepmom #4. I try not to let it get to me—it’s his life,
after all, and I want him to be happy, even if it does mean having to pretend
to be interested in some daffy stranger’s rare doll collection just because she
happens to be married to my dad.
“Oh, I’m sorry,” I
tease, “so you’re not getting married
again?”
“Well, yes,” my dad
admits sheepishly. Then he brightens. “But this one’s a winner. Really, Livvie,
it’s someone I’m sure you’ll like.”
“Oh
yeah?” I ask, taking a sip of my prosecco. “What’s she like?”
“You
already know her,” my dad says, visibly pleased with himself. “In fact: you’ve
lived together.”
“We’ve—wait,
what?” I set my glass down on the
table.
There’s a horrifying
moment where I start to put two and two together, but
it’s like I can’t force my brain to finish the thought
before two hands with long pink nails like talons land on my shoulders.
“Surprise!”
I whirl around and there’s
Vanessa suddenly looming over me like a Disney villain, as if she’d appeared in
a puff of smoke. “Guess what, Livvie,” she trills, baring her teeth in a wide,
white smile. “I’m going to be your new mom!”
About the Author
Combining her passions
for books, sex, and well-fitted suits, Lila Monroe wrote her first romantic
comedy, The Billionaire Bargain, in 2015 and hasn’t stopped since. She loves
writing about smart alpha men, and the strong and sassy women who try to tame
them.
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