As John says, this is fake traffic known as "referral spam". This morning I had about 80% of my "traffic" coming from this same domain.
Rest assured, you are not paying Google for these clicks.
The basic idea behind referral spam is that some hosts will publish their logs or Analytics data publicly, thus creating links and/or text references to their spam-domain.com. So these spammers send fake requests to your site with spam-domain.com as the referrer header in the hopes that you'll publish those links for some reason and give them an SEO boost.
Obviously, this is highly annoying and worse if you don't notice or account for it you, may be making bad business decisions based on incorrect data. There also doesn't seem to be any really simply way to prevent this type of thing. The reason being is that in the case of many of these referral spammers they're not sending any actual requests to your server. If you check your logs, you'll likely not find any requests made where the domain in question was sent as the actual referrer. What they are doing is sending fake tracking calls to Google Analytics for random Google Analytics account #s. Thus, because they're not actually visiting your server, in many cases blocking them at the server level will not do you any good. If you do see the domain in your server logs, blocking that particular referrer in .htaccess for example should solve the problem.
So in the case where they're only spamming via Google Analytics, the only way to block this spammy data is at through Google Analytics filters, unfortunately. The most accurate way to do this will be to create a View filter that excludes any session where the referrer is spam-domain.com. This is non-ideal because you have to manually maintain the list going forward.
Alternatively, you can also filter based on the hostname
in the request. Because the spammers don't know your actual domain name, they only know a Google Analytics account # that they've generated at "random", they're unable to pass your domain name with the pageview. So in Analytics, you can go to Audience->Technology->Network, and you'll see various hosts listed, some of which will be yours, others which will be valid domains like webcache.googleusercontent.com, translate.googleusercontent.com or other domains where you may be using the same tracking code. You'll also see a bunch from the spam-domain.com. So to avoid having to manually update your list of blocked domains, you can setup a filter that will only allow data from your known good domains. The only downside of this is that you may lose traffic data if you miss a domain or forget to add it in the future.
A possible third option is that you can just change your Google Analytics Tracking ID to something that doesn't end in -1. It seems many of these guys doing Analytics spam are lazy, and only check the first property of an Analytics account. This isn't something you'd want to rely on though, as the domain you mentioned either has somehow crawled valid Anaytlics Tracking IDs, or is trying many property values for each account.