My V-card for Daddy's Friend
Passion Exclusive
New Adult
4.2K
Description
Twenty-two-year-old virgin Mikaela Wallace has been the perfect daughter her entire life-until her billionaire father announces her engagement to a stranger at her own birthday party. Faced with an arranged marriage or total financial ruin, Mikaela discovers the ultimate rebellion: auctioning her virginity online for nearly half a million dollars. It's the perfect plan to buy her freedom with the one thing Daddy values most. But when she arrives at the hotel room, the mysterious buyer waiting for her isn't a stranger. It's the one person whose betrayal would destroy her father completely. Now Mikaela must choose: walk away with her carefully constructed life intact, or surrender to the forbidden desire that could give her everything she's ever wanted... and cost her everything she's ever known.
Chapter 1
Aug 8, 2025
POV Mikaela
There's a special circle of hell called "turning twenty-two at Le Bernardin while Manhattan's elite assess your market value."
I'm the birthday girl who gets no wishes, no song, no candles.
Just appraising glances from people who think my virginity is still a commodity worth investing in.
Twenty-two and never been fucked, and not just literally, but figuratively too. Because daddy's security team has cockblocked every potential experience since puberty hit.
The irony? I probably know more about sex than half of these married socialites, thanks to the Kindle stashed inside my hollow copy of "Women in Economics."
Three hundred and twelve steamy novels later, and I'm still trapped in this display case, untouched and pristine like some collector's item nobody's allowed to play with.
That's when I see him—a man I've never spotted at my father's gatherings before.
Dark hair kissed with silver, jawline sharp enough to slice through bullshit, watching the room with barely concealed disdain.
He's older, maybe late thirties, but radiates something these other corporate zombies lack: actual fucking life force.
His eyes meet mine for exactly three heartbeats, and the oxygen molecules between us spontaneously combust.
Before I can process what just happened, he's standing, murmuring something to my father, then striding toward the exit with his phone pressed to his ear.
Emergency call or convenient escape?
Either way, he's gone, leaving me weirdly breathless and suddenly aware of how boring everyone else is.
"Smile, Mikaela," mother hisses through her veneers. "The Andersons are watching."
Watch me perform my greatest trick: transforming into Perfect Daughter™ in 0.5 seconds.
Eyes warm but not inviting. Smile pleasant but not provocative. My emerald dress (mother-selected, obviously) shows just enough skin to prove I have it, not enough to suggest I might enjoy using it.
I'm basically a walking prospectus with tits—amazing potential returns, minimal risk, zero agency.
"Christ, these people's egos are so massive they should charge them for extra seating," Josie muttered, barely moving her lips behind her glass. "Happy birthday, by the way. How's it feel having your special day weaponized into a networking event?"
A laugh shot up my throat that I suffocated into a polite cough.
Josie had saved my sanity since prep school, the only human who could x-ray through my perfect-daughter bullshit and see the handcuffs underneath.
"Mrs. Wallace, you've done a remarkable job with your daughter," said Mr. Covington. "Such poise, such grace. They don't make young ladies like this anymore."
I felt my soul crumble a little more as mother beamed. "Thank you, Edward. We've always believed proper upbringing is essential."
Proper upbringing.
As if my life had been anything other than a carefully curated performance to reflect well on Gunther Wallace's empire.
I'd never dated, never attended a school dance, never worked. I'd been dressed, educated, and molded into the perfect accessory.
Perfect virgin-wife material.
"Excuse me," I murmured, standing abruptly. "I need to freshen up."
The restaurant bathroom was mercifully empty when I pushed through the door, gripping the marble countertop as I stared at my reflection.
Behind me, the door banged open.
"You're about thirty seconds from a full psychological break in Chanel," Josie announced.
"I'm suffocating," I whispered, voice splintering like cheap glass. "Twenty-two fucking years and I've never breathed non-filtered, non-approved air. My birthday gift? Not even actual stock certificates—just a goddamn trust fund statement for money I can't touch until I'm practically menopausal."
"Listen up," Josie leaned in, all business. "Tomorrow night, I'm kidnapping your ass. We're hitting real clubs with real music and real humans who don't calculate bloodlines before making eye contact."
For one electric second, I saw it—freedom sprawled before me like some wild, unmapped continent.
My chest constricted with a want so savage it felt like cardiac arrest.
Then reality crashed down like a designer anvil. Two decades of premium conditioning crushed that spark with terrifying efficiency.
"I can't," I whispered, hating the wobble in my voice, hating more the sick relief underneath my disappointment. "Remember last time? The security team? The financial guillotine?"
My fingers whitened against marble, bones threatening to pierce skin.
"Coffee tomorrow. Somewhere sanitized."
Josie's expression collapsed, and there it was—the thing I couldn't stomach—pure fucking pity. She grabbed my hand; I let her, shame scorching me alive.
"Sure, coffee works," she said gently, which was somehow worse than anger. She understood my pathetic surrender without judgment, a kindness I hadn't earned.
When we rejoin the table, I freeze.
The mystery man is back, now seated at my father's right hand.
Up close, he's even more devastating—confident in a way that comes from actually living life instead of just accumulating wealth.
"Ah, Mikaela, there you are," my father says, irritated by my absence. "I'd like you to meet Caleb O'Brien, an old friend and business associate of mine. Caleb, my daughter."
So that's who he is.
The pieces click into place as I note my father's hand clapping Caleb's shoulder—a gesture of familiarity rarely extended in Father's tightly controlled world.
Though clearly younger than my father by several years, the subtle lines around Caleb's eyes speak of experience, of a life fully lived beyond boardrooms and balance sheets.
God, he’s gorgeous.
Caleb stood, towering at least ten inches above me. He extended a hand, his voice low and confident.
"Hello, Mikaela. Last time I saw you, you were in pigtails hiding behind your mother's legs. I have to say, the years between then and now have been... generous."
His eyes swept over me—not crude, but thorough. Like he was cataloguing every detail, every change from that pigtailed kid to whatever I'd become.
For exactly three seconds, he looked at me like a man looking at a woman who claimed his attention.
Then he caught himself. Blinked. Shifted back into polite family friend mode so smoothly I almost convinced myself I'd imagined it.
Almost.
My hand trembled in his for the briefest moment, heat crawling up my neck at the simple contact and his compliment.
"Thank you," I murmured.
But I couldn't stop looking at him. Throughout dinner, my eyes kept finding their way back to Caleb.
Every smile, every low rumble of his laugh, every glance in my direction made my chest tighten in unfamiliar ways. He wasn't trying to belong, he simply did.
"She's been raised properly," Mr. Hennington was saying. "A real lady. The kind of girl who understands her place in society."
I felt my smile calcifying on my face as I nodded graciously, dying inside.
"If another man calls you 'a real lady,' I'm baptizing him with Cabernet," Caleb murmured, mouth dangerously close to my ear.
A strangled laugh escaped me—social suicide—triggering my mother's laser-beam glare. Caleb's eyes crinkled at the corners, fucking delighted by my lapse.
Later, during an excruciating conversational drought, he leaned in again. "These corporate feeding frenzies—your thing?"
My lips twitched, still high from his earlier rebellion. "Only when I'm the prize being auctioned off," I deadpanned.
Caleb burst into a surprised laugh, genuine and warm. It was the first time anyone at the table had reacted to me as more than a trophy.
The moment hung between us, electric but brief.
When Father stood, champagne flute in hand, I finally relaxed. Birthday toast, perfunctory acknowledgment of my existence, then dessert and freedom—at least the limited version available to me.
"I'd like to thank everyone for joining us on this special occasion," Father began, his commanding voice silencing all conversation. "Today we not only celebrate my daughter's twenty-second birthday but also a momentous announcement."
I froze, confusion replacing relief.
"It gives me great pleasure to announce the engagement of my daughter, Mikaela, to Anthony Harris, heir to Harris Financial. Our families will be united this fall in what promises to be the social event of the season."
The world tilted sideways.
Engagement? Anthony Harris? I'd never even met him.
As applause erupted around me, I turned slightly to my right where Caleb sat beside me.
The proximity was sudden torture, every molecule between us charged with something I couldn't name but felt like drowning.
His smile was gone, replaced by a jaw clenched tight enough to crack stone. His grip on the wine glass was so severe I could see the blood retreating from his knuckles, leaving them bone-white against the crystal.
Something dark and unforgiving flickered in his eyes when he looked at my father as if he saw him for the first time, before they met mine.
A flash so brief I might have imagined it, but it seared through the numbness spreading inside me like a poison.
At that moment, I realized I wasn't just a daughter.
I was a commodity which had just been sold.
My V-card for Daddy's Friend
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