I was running out of time, Christmas was fast approaching and I didn't yet have a present for Jenny, my girlfriend of almost 2 years. I wanted something that was perfect, something that made a statement but something that was most definitely not a diamond ring. It's not that I'd never thought of proposing to Jenny, we were at that age where our friends were starting to get engaged, but doing it on Christmas would have just been a bit too cliche.
I drove myself crazy scouring websites of stores like Amazon and every jewelry store I could find. I just could not find a present that I felt was personal and special. I knew there had to be a simple answer, but I was just not finding it. I decided I needed some outside help, so I called up one of my best friends in the world, Hannah. We had been friends since grammar school and if anyone could help me, she could.
"Hey, stranger," Hannah said as she picked up the phone.
"Hi," I said, "I hate Christmas shopping."
"I can give you my list if you want it," she laughed.
"No, you're easy to buy for," I smiled. "Anything with diamonds, right?"
"You know me too well," Hannah said playfully. "Preferably really big diamonds. I'm assuming you're obsessing over Jenny's Christmas gift?"
"Yeah, I just want something that stands out and is personal," I groaned.
"A diamond ring?" Hannah giggled.
"Don't start with me," I said. "I'm not quite ready to settle down yet."
"Maybe you just haven't found the right girl," Hannah said bluntly.
"I know you're not Jenny's biggest fan," I said, "but she's my girlfriend."
"I know, but if you're not ready for a diamond ring yet maybe you should be asking yourself why you're not ready to get her a diamond ring, Don," Hannah sighed.
"How do you know when you've found the right girl?" I asked.
"You just know, Don," Hannah said. "Do I have to explain everything to you?"
"Maybe, it could be helpful for an idiot like me," I laughed.
"It's different for everybody, but the one constant is that when it happens you know it happens."
"When what happens?" I groaned.
"It, love, dumbass. The universe has a way of letting you know when you're with the right person, Don. It can be fireworks, it can be a feeling of warm chocolate chip cookies or it could be the complete inability to speak. Whatever it is, you will know it when it happens," Hannah assured me.
"This time of year is just so stressful, I could really use a vacation."
"There you go," Hannah said.
"What?" I asked, confused.
"A vacation," she replied, "Go back to basics. You met her at a Valentine's Day party, right?"
"Yeah," I said. "Well, an anti-Valentine's Day party over at Joe's on Weed."
"That's right, you're a rebel," Hannah laughed.
"I am, thank you very much," I smiled as I pulled up a picture on my phone of Jenny and me from that party. She was wearing a grass skirt and I was wearing a Hawaiian shirt. "Hawaii," I said.
"Hawaii?" Hannah asked.
"The party had a Hawaiian theme. I will take her to Hawaii over Valentine's Day, it'll be perfect!" I said as I started typing search terms into Google on my MacBook Pro keyboard.
"Perfect for you, yeah, it gets you out of buying her a Valentine's Day gift," Hannah laughed.
"No, not really," I groaned as I started looking up Hawaiian vacations. "But, thanks for your help, my dear. Now, I have to scour the Internet for a decently priced trip."
"You're welcome," Hannah said. "I'm always glad to help. Don't forget, I'll be expecting something with diamonds in my Christmas stocking, babe."
"You are worth every penny," I smiled. "Bye."
"Bye," Hannah said and then hung up the phone.
It took me a couple days of searching more travel sites than I can remember but I finally found a deal for a week in Maui at the Four Seasons that I could afford. The package had to be pre-paid and was non-refundable but I didn't care. My latest app was selling well in the iTunes Store and I had some money saved up so I pulled the trigger and made the reservations. With the click of a mouse I felt like the weight of the world was lifted off my shoulders, of course, it came at a price of about $7000 being lifted from my bank account.
It was going to be perfect, celebrating two years together with Jenny in beautiful Maui. I couldn't help but think back to that anti-Valentine's Day party and how she and I met and how fate had intervened. I had been standing at the bar for a while when I saw an amazing blonde across the room. She was about 5'5" and wearing a red floral dress with a couple of leis around her neck. I tried to screw my courage up to go talk to her, but it took me a few shots of Jack Daniels to get properly out of my shy zone.
As I started out across the room, the blonde looked right at me. Her crystal blue eyes were amazing and her smile was warm and inviting and it seemed like something out of a movie as our eyes locked from across the room. For a moment it was like the bar was empty except for the two of us. That changed abruptly when a tall, beautiful brunette literally fell into my arms. I looked at her and then heard the commotion, I quickly realized that a fairly large fight had broken out in the bar. I looked back up but the blonde was gone and the brunette was pulling me through the bar and out the back door into the alley.
"Hi, I'm Jenny," the brunette said with a grin as I heard police sirens closing on our location.
"Hi, I'm Don," I said.
"We should get out of here," she smiled. "Pancakes?"
"Yeah, sure," I said, in a bit of a daze. Jenny grabbed my hand and we ran through the alley until we were a couple of blocks from the bar. We walked another block and came to a little hole in the wall restaurant called Maxine's Cafe. It looked like a cross between a typical take-out joint and 1950's cafe. We sat at a booth in the corner and Jenny smiled at me from across the table.