Author's Note : The following is the last of a series of three stories I plan on writing about the three luscious females in the hit comic series, 'Archies.' If you are offended by the fantasy, please remember that magic word called 'tolerance', and ignore it/them. I mean no harm to the characters or the comics, and write this only for pleasure, not profit.
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The frustrated maternal instincts of a woman are often the most powerful in the world, as inimical as the joy of giving birth is not. And as the days passed, the truism was all the more emphasized in Midge Robinson-Mason's life.
At twenty-four, happily married and well-settled, she should have been looking forward to the expansion of her family, but with an absentee husband and a ticking biological clock, she was in no position for family planning. Her life was happy, yes, but that was when her husband, Moose Mason, was home. The problem was, he rarely was.
And as much as Midge wanted to say "Damn You!" when he called up week after week with excuses for being late, she couldn't find the heart to do so. She loved him - she thought she did - and the big bear was so devoted to her she just couldn't put her foot down. It was one of those rare spins life throws at us - we are often the weakest with the people we love.
This particular Saturday morning, her husband had called again. To say he wouldn't be able to make it in time for Thanksgiving. She had replied politely, saying she understood, for the simple reason that his profession meant a lot to him. Never mind that she would be having just the turkey for company that night.
A bathrobe is hardly the attire for such a festive occasion, but when you expect no one else but yourself in the house, you don't dress for dinner. Midge half-expected her husband to show up at their doorstep at the last moment, but she knew that it was pure fantasy on her part.
So when the doorbell rang, she practically ran to the door, hardly bothering to tie the belt of the robe around her waist. Only a pair of lace panties formed her second line of defense against nudity, but she was so excited about her husband's arrival that she cared little that her breasts were bared to the world, the robe fluttering back against the current of air generated by her speed.
She threw open the door, flung her arms around the man on her threshold and kissed him fiercely on his mouth.
And it was only when her arms sensed that the girth was smaller than Moose's that the woman realized she was not holding her husband.
"Dad!"
"Midge!"
Jack Robinson stared at his daughter. She had jumped back, but their arms had linked, and he still held her. The wind outside billowed her robe, sending it flying back, and it shocked the father to see his daughter in such a state of undress. Her pert breasts looked firm and heavy, and the strawberries on top were a dark shade of pink. The encircling skin was the same shade to the width of a dime, and her panting caused the mounds to sway.
"Do you always greet people on Thanksgiving like that?"
That broke the ice. Midge recovered enough to pull her robe back over her exposed body before laughing freely at his remark. His smile eased the awkwardness of her shoulders, and she thanked her stars that there had been no one on the streets. It would have been quite a sight for them!
Midge moved aside and gestured for her father to come in. He obliged, curtsying her with a bow before removing his coat and tie. "Happy Thanksgiving," he greeted, landing a gentle, fatherly peck on her cheeks. She returned the gesture, and gave him a hug as a bonus.
"Moosie not here?"
Midge winced theatrically, and her father smiled. "Nope. As usual, something's come up and he wants to make sure he is not left behind. If you hadn't shown up, it was just me and the turkey for the dinner. Thanks, Dad."
"No problem, kiddo."
She liked the way he called her kiddo; since she had been a little girl, he had always called her that. Somehow, it conveyed to her that infinite attention a parent has for the child, and it made her realize how much she was missing out.
"Where's Mom?"
Jack grinned at his daughter. "Paris. Fashion City. Ever since her shop had that show of Ardmand's, she's been busy. Got a call about a contract today morning, and I saw her off a couple of hours ago. As you said, sharing the table with only a turkey makes you feel like one yourself. Then I remembered you, and figured I would drop in -"
"And it took a turkey to remind you of ME?" she countered playfully.
Jack laughed from the bottom of his lungs. "Knew you wouldn't miss that! Just the same old Midge. Seriously, though, it's been a week since we last spoke, and since you happen to be an only child, I guess I will have to trouble you like this everytime."
"Bosh! It's no trouble at all."
Jack took in her appearance. Still the same old Midge indeed. The same figure, the same bob-cut, the same lovely smile... she was still very much the girl he loved. His observation of her physical aspects was a recent phenomenon, one that he had started to find disturbing - he was evaluating her, and it did not seem to him proper that a father should 'evaluate' his daughter.
The bath robe had been tied so tightly around the waist that it hugged her hourglass body, sensuously enconscing her feminine nature in a way that an unrelated man would find excitable. Being a father only prevented the excitement from showing.
Midge noticed her father's interest in her rather modest attire, but she had no idea of the personal feelings that were coursing across him. On the other hand, even if she had known, it would have been debatable if she was in any position to sit in judgment of him. After all, she was checking him out.
Only seventeen years older than her, Jack Robinson still retained a fair share of his youthfulness, a trait that was reflected by his looks. He was neither a hunk nor a nerd, neither a flirt nor an introvert, and ten minutes of casual exercise a day ensured that there was no extra pressure on his belt. He was half a head taller, a full chock of hair and enough flair about him to make her wonder a very wrong question.
If he had not been her father...?