During the great shutdown of 2020, they met on Bumble. He was just a boy with a profile picture of himself and a koala. She was just a girl with a professional headshot photo as her profile picture. She asked how his koala was, and he then spent the next 30 minutes crafting the perfect joke with the ideal punchline to hook, line, and sink her. After three weeks of chatting on the app, Rachel was on a date with another Chris that was, quite frankly, out of her nightmares. While he was in the bathroom, she texted koala bear Chris to ask when they'd finally meet in person. Their first date was unconventional, due to the lockdown. They met at Rachel's place for dinner and a movie, where they watched The Silence of the Lambs, both their first viewing of the film. It was ironically on Chris's birthday. After dating for a year and a half, Chris moved in with Rachel and her roommates, where they lived for three years before they left the great state of California for the far less crowded and expensive Colorful Colorado. Since living together, they've adopted a sweet, slightly rambunctious mutt named Riley, and they love her like a human child. Okay, maybe that's just Rachel. The proposal story is, like them, also unconventional. If you're familiar with Friedrich Bhaer's proposal to Jo March in Little Women, it went much like that. Jo (Rachel) interpreting Bhaer's (Chris's) going away (unsettling questions) to mean that he only cares for her as a friend (that he doesn't want to marry her), when in fact, his plan to go away (the questions he posed) was only because he thought Jo didn't care for him as anything other than a friend (were only to ensure they were suited to the commitment of marriage). So, in the end, Rachel did get her Little Women proposal.