Brittany Borges Guardians Of The Glades Bikini May 2026
Brittany laughed, wiping a smear of mud from her cheek. “And most folks would have turned around at the first alligator.” She looked back at the dark, silent glades. “We’re not most folks.”
Then she heard it. A deep, ominous hiss followed by the thrash of heavy coils. brittany borges guardians of the glades bikini
The problem was the route. The only way in was a two-mile paddle through a series of tight, shallow creeks too narrow for their airboat. And in the brutal, shimmering heat of a Florida July, that meant one thing: she was going in the water. Brittany laughed, wiping a smear of mud from her cheek
She pulled the kayak alongside a mud bank and stepped out, the cool muck squelching between her toes. Her python hook was in her hand. Ten feet away, half-hidden in the roots of a giant strangler fig, was a mass of scales. It wasn't one python. It was three. A large female, easily fourteen feet, and two smaller males, all tangled in a breeding ball. A deep, ominous hiss followed by the thrash of heavy coils
Brittany’s heart hammered, but her hands were steady. This was the prize. She radioed Crockett in a whisper. “I’ve got eyes on a triple. Need a hand.”
Brittany peeled off her usual field gear—the thick gloves, the heavy cargo pants, the reinforced boots. She tucked a compact satellite phone, a multi-tool, and a small first-aid kit into a dry bag. For clothing, she opted for a high-SPF rash guard and a pair of durable, quick-drying shorts. But as she looked at her reflection in the side mirror of the truck, she paused. Her typical swimsuit was back at the base. The only thing clean in her go-bag was a bright turquoise bikini she’d thrown in for a rare day off. She shrugged. Function over fashion—or in this case, function with a side of tropical flair.
She slipped into the bikini, tied her dark hair back into a tight braid, and slid the narrow kayak into the water. The moment she pushed off, the world closed in. Towering cypress trees draped in Spanish moss blocked the sun, casting dappled shadows on the water. The air was thick, buzzing with dragonflies and the distant, prehistoric bellow of an alligator.










































