and what she would have done if they hadn’t all laughed at her,
or if her amber hair hadn’t been perfectly swept
past her temples, her breasts not so tucked in satin
(and really, wasn’t her petal-pink dress the truest test of time?)
I think of these Carrie iterations and admit
I get lost because there is already so much about
Carrie that could have been:
like, wouldn’t the blood have been
congealed by the time the tinsel
had been strung, the stars cut and hung
by ladder from one end of the ceiling
to the other? Wouldn’t John Travolta have been
the male lead, realistically – not that
smarmy blonde with curls
whose forehead bloomed into a
goose egg when he took the second hit
from the swinging bucket
with an oval look of horror on his face,
as if to say he deserved it, as if to say,
My god, Carrie, how could they do this to you. They.
But this: wouldn’t Carrie have realistically reached maximal
pleasure when the gymnasium doors slammed
shut like portals, considering her condition,
whatever laws of physics, magic, whatever
whatever governed her. I don’t know. Laughter.
But she did the big one on all those friends.
And wouldn’t you think, with everything in her world
changing that week, so violent, bloody red,
the womanly body of it all, the standing
in it, showering, spotlight, spectacle of it all,
laughter, piggy, the camaraderie and
grand, sparkle night of it all, wouldn’t you think
she’d have experienced it, ecstasy?
