Bikini Beach: My Dumb Bikini Summer
By
Emily Safeharbor
(Feedback is super special to me so if you have any thoughts at all I'd love to hear them!)
Chapter 1: Girls Just Want to Have Fun
Emily came home to her empty apartment. She wished she had the energy to go and do do something. When she was younger she used to make so many memories, almost every week she was up for doing something or trying something but now it seemed like everyday she would just slouch deep into her computer chair, scroll through the internet, waste her time, waste her life, and then go to sleep knowing she had to go to work the next day. That was her everyday life now and of course today was no different.
She slouched deeper into her chair, remote in one hand and a cup of green tea in the other, flipping through screen after screen in a bored malaise. It had gotten so bad that she viewed watching an actually scripted drama as an improvement so with an act of will she turned on her television and for the first time in years began flipping through he changes it had. She saw the canned laugh tracks of sitcoms, the pleasing smiles of cooks on cooking shows making dishes she knew she could copy but didn't have the energy to, and even a few dramas that failed to bring excitement into her dimly lit apartment.
She paused momentarily on a news segment about the latest political scandal, her brow furrowing slightly at the rhetoric on screen. Politics always had a way of pulling her in, but she never did anything about it. She never actually joined an organized or made a difference, she just got madder and madder. She didn't want to get mad tonight. She wanted something light, something that would remove at least some of her day-to-day thoughts.
Click.
The screen filled with a blaring 80's synthesizer track and the neon title "My Dumb Bikini Summer" appeared, flashing in bright pink and blue. The scene cut to a sun-soaked beach, where a group of young women, all impossibly tanned and scantily clad, laughed and frolicked in the sand. The camera panned to a bumbling guy chasing after them with exaggerated, cartoonish movements.
Emily rolled her eyes, her thumb hovering over the button to change the channel. She knew this genre well--cheesy, sleazy, and utterly ridiculous. The kind of movie where every "joke" had a misogynistic punch line and, every plot point was a flimsy excuse for scantily clad beach scenes. A relic of an era that made her cringe.
"Seriously?" she muttered to herself, shaking her head. "They really thought this was the pinnacle of comedy."
A particularly ludicrous scene unfolded--a beach contest where the protagonist, in an attempt to impress the bikini-clad judges, ended up face-planting into a sandcastle. It was stupid, ridiculous, and problematic in all the ways she condemned.
"God, the 80s were wild," she mumbled before getting up to turn off the TV. Just at the moment her hand was barely touching the power button, a bolt of lighting came through her open window, slammed into her TV and it felt like time was slowing down. She could see the lightening bolt. She could see the electricity travel from the TV to her finger. She could see it racing up through her veins into her mind. And she had just enough time to think, "Isn't lightening the stupidest of 1980's clichΓ©'s for something magical to happen?" before... Blackness.
Emily's eyes fluttered open, a harsh brightness stabbing through her eyelids. She squinted against the blazing sunlight and felt a sharp grainy texture beneath her. Sand. She was lying on sand. She sat up slowly, her head spinning as the world came into focus--a vast, sun-drenched beach stretching out before her, framed by swaying palm trees and dotted with colorful beach towels and sun umbrellas.
The scene was almost too perfect, too postcard-like, as if it had been airbrushed by someone with a love for garish, oversaturated hues. Emily blinked, trying to piece together what had happened. She glanced down at herself and frowned. Her sweatshirt and sweatpants were gone, replaced by a bright pink bikini she would never, in a million years, have picked out for herself. She knew she shouldn't be, but she had always had issues with her flat A-cup chest and never wore anything so revealing because of it. She tugged at the fabric, feeling exposed and awkward, her discomfort mounting with each passing second.
A loud cheer erupted nearby, pulling her attention to a group of men tossing a football back and forth in the shallows, their laughter booming and carefree. Further down the beach, a group of women in barely-there swimsuits were engaged in an exaggerated game of beach volleyball, each spike and dive accompanied by bouncy, slow-motion physics that defied any semblance of reality.
Emily's mouth fell open. She knew this place. The music, the scenery, the people--all straight out of "My Dumb Bikini Summer."
"WHAT IS GOING ON HERE???????" Emily shouted at the top of her lungs.
After her outburst, the festivities on the beach paused. The football splashed into the shallow water. The volleyball hit the sand with a soft thud. For a moment the perky breasts stopped bouncing, coming to rest with a slight jiggle.
Beautiful blue and hazel eyes turned to her. Only the crashing of waves could be heard for a moment.
Then the young man closest to Emily smiled and shouted, "You must be the new girl!"
That seemed to break the spell of silence and everyone got back to their games, their laughs, their jiggles.
The smiling guy approached, a tall, well toned hunk with alabaster skin that had been tanned into a gorgeous tan. His slightly darker skin made his impossibly white teeth stand out. He wore a red speedo, the sort TV lifeguards and no one else wore.
When he got close enough he didn't have to shout over the waves, he stopped and touched one of his perfectly sculpted pecs.
"I'm Tad. I'm glad you're here. We can use all the help we can get. If we don't figure out how to raise half a million dollars by the end of the week, we can kiss this paradise goodbye." Tad emphasized that last word with a flourish of his hand that a children's theater director would have considered a bit much.
He held out his hand to help Emily up. "What's your name, beautiful?"