Wettmelons May 2026

Halfway down the lane, her arms screaming, she felt something give. Not her muscles. The heavy curtain of self-consciousness she’d worn all summer, the one that told her she was too gangly, too quiet, too much in some ways and not enough in others. She laughed, a real, bubbling laugh that filled her mouth with chlorine.

Selene looked around. At Maya, who was locked in an epic inflatable orca joust with a kid in a pirate ship. At the elderly woman doing gentle backstrokes, singing show tunes. At the chaos, the joy, the complete and utter weirdness. WettMelons

Taking a breath that felt like borrowing courage from a future, braver version of herself, Selene lowered into the water. The cold was a shock, a baptism. She pushed off the wall, elbows flailing like a wounded duck. Halfway down the lane, her arms screaming, she

Selene’s palms were slick with sunscreen and nerves. She stood at the edge of the public pool, staring at the warped reflection of her sixteen-year-old self in the shimmering water. Around her, the soundtrack of summer played on: the shriek of a toddler, the thwack of a volleyball, the low, thrumming bass of a lifeguard’s whistle. She laughed, a real, bubbling laugh that filled

It was silly. It was magical.

He smiled. A real one. Then, he did something unexpected. He pushed off his blue ring, let it drift away, and grabbed the edge of her chipped watermelon.