What is the plot?

Kristen and Luke keep to themselves at the start of the episode, staying away from the larger group while the pressure of the coming proposal hangs over them. Luke is visibly preoccupied because his grandmother is not doing well, and that emotional strain is layered on top of his nerves about proposing, leaving him tense and distracted.

The group around them is already drinking heavily, and the mood becomes increasingly sloppy and unruly as the night goes on. Jesse is especially out of control, and his behavior stands out even among the others' drunkenness.

Just hours before the planned proposal, Luke loses his cool and has an emotional blowup. The episode does not pause for a major public confrontation at this point, but his frustration and stress spill out in a way that underscores how close he is to reaching his breaking point before the big moment.

The next major sequence is the proposal day itself. Kristen and Luke go on the planned fishing trip with Danny and Nia, with Luke intending to ask Kristen to marry him at sunset. Before the proposal, Luke tells Kristen to shower, a small but telling move that keeps the plan on track and signals that he is trying to manage the timing and setting carefully.

During the outing, the couple is placed in an unusual romantic backdrop when local stingrays put on a mating display for them. The scene plays as a strange but memorable natural spectacle surrounding the proposal setup, adding an awkwardly symbolic layer to the moment.

Luke then goes through with the proposal and asks Kristen to marry him. Kristen accepts, and the central outcome of the episode is that she becomes engaged.

After the proposal, Zack takes on the job of calling the rest of the cast to announce the news and pull everyone together for an impromptu celebration. Brittany receives the call and reacts badly because she is hurt that she was left out of the secret and not included in the buildup to the engagement, even though Kristen is one of her close friends.

While Brittany is processing the news on the phone, Jason overhears what is happening. Instead of simply joining the celebration, Janet reacts by focusing on how annoyed she is that the gathering is now an engagement party for Kristen. She says this while also pointing out that it is the longest they have left their son, shifting the emotional center of the moment away from Kristen's engagement and toward her own irritation.

By the end of the episode, the engagement has been announced, the group is being pulled into an improvised party around the news, Brittany is wounded by being excluded, and Janet has turned the occasion into a fresh point of conflict rather than allowing it to remain a straightforward celebration.

What is the ending?

Kristen and Luke end the episode engaged, after Luke's planned fishing trip turns into the surprise proposal in Maui. Brittany reacts with hurt because she was left out of the secret, and Janet's reaction turns the happy moment into tension for the group.

Kristen's ending is straightforward: she becomes a fiancée, and the episode closes with the relationship milestone centered on her and Luke. Brittany's ending is more strained: after learning she was not included in the proposal plans, she feels excluded and upset. Janet ends the episode in conflict, threatening to leave early after realizing the trip was built around Luke and Kristen's proposal, and the fallout shifts attention away from the celebration.

The final stretch of the episode begins with Luke's proposal setup, which Kristen does not know about. The fishing trip he arranged is the cover for the engagement, and the moment lands as the episode's main event. After Kristen accepts, the group is pulled into the news, and the reaction around her immediately becomes part celebration, part friction.

Brittany is then hit hardest by the secrecy. Once she learns she was not included, her response is emotional rather than celebratory, and the episode treats that as a real wound in the friendship dynamic. Janet's response escalates the conflict further; instead of staying with the engagement, she makes the moment about her own frustration with the situation and threatens to leave the trip early.

The episode then settles back on the engagement itself, ending with the couple's room decorated in flowers, underscoring that Kristen and Luke's relationship is the outcome the story has been building toward.

Is there a post-credit scene?

No post-credit scene is indicated in the available episode information for The Valley, Season 2, Episode 12, "Will You Maui Me?". The episode is described as ending with the proposal-related storyline and, in recap coverage, with Jesse decorating the couple's room with 1,000 flowers, but none of the provided sources mention an additional post-credit sequence.

If you want, I can also give you a scene-by-scene recap of the episode's ending so you can see exactly where it cuts off.

Is this family friendly?

No--this episode is not especially family friendly. It's rated TV-14 and, based on the episode listing and promo material, it includes adult relationship conflict, emotional confrontation, and discussion of mental health care and cheating accusations.

Potentially upsetting or objectionable elements for children or sensitive viewers may include:

  • Relationship drama and conflict, including hurt feelings, exclusion, and tense social interactions.
  • Arguments and confrontation, such as a "disrespectful" confrontation between adults and a controversial post leading to a heated discussion.
  • Cheating accusations and related marital/romantic tension.
  • Mental health care references, specifically Jax being in mental health care, which may be sensitive for some viewers.
  • Gossip and emotional manipulation, including "gossip" complicating a reconciliation and a threat to leave a trip early.
  • Adult themes typical of reality TV, with a strong focus on personal relationships rather than kid-appropriate content.

If you want, I can also give you a very brief "safe for kids / okay for teens / best for adults" recommendation.