holding a dinner. But he suddenly stopped and turned around. “I thought, wow, I’d rather have
dinner with her than the education group, so I ran back to her car and said ‘How about dinner
tonight
?’” She said yes. It was a beautiful fall evening, and they walked into Palo Alto to a funky
vegetarian restaurant, St. Michael’s Alley, and ended up staying there for four hours. “We’ve been
together ever since,” he said.
Avie Tevanian was sitting at the winery restaurant waiting with the rest of the NeXT education
group. “Steve was sometimes unreliable, but when I talked to him I realized that something
special had come up,” he said. As soon as Powell got home,
after midnight, she
called her close friend Kathryn (Kat) Smith, who was at Berkeley, and left a message on her
machine. “You will not believe what just happened to me!” it said. “You will not believe who I
met!” Smith called back the next morning and heard the tale. “We had known about Steve, and he
was a person of interest to us, because we were business students,” she recalled.
Andy Hertzfeld and a few others later speculated that Powell had been scheming to meet Jobs.
“Laurene is nice, but she can be calculating, and I think she targeted him from the beginning,”
Hertzfeld said. “Her college roommate told me that Laurene had magazine covers of Steve and
vowed she was going to meet him. If it’s true that Steve was manipulated, there is a fair amount of
irony there.” But Powell later insisted that this wasn’t the case. She went only because her friend
wanted to go, and she was slightly confused as to who they were going to see. “I knew that Steve
Jobs was the speaker, but the face I thought of was that of Bill Gates,” she recalled. “I had them
mixed up. This was 1989.
He was working at NeXT, and he was not that big of a deal to me. I
wasn’t that enthused, but my friend was, so we went.”
“There were only two women in my life that I was truly in love with, Tina and Laurene,” Jobs
later said. “I thought I was in love with Joan Baez, but I really just liked her a lot. It was just Tina
and then Laurene.”
Laurene Powell had been born in New Jersey in 1963 and learned to be self-sufficient at an early
age. Her father was a Marine Corps pilot who died a hero in a crash in Santa Ana, California; he
had been leading a crippled plane in for a landing, and when it hit his plane he kept flying to avoid
a residential area rather than ejecting in time to save his life. Her mother’s second marriage turned
out to be a horrible situation, but she felt she couldn’t leave because she had no means to support
her large family. For ten years Laurene and her three brothers had to suffer in a tense household,
keeping a good demeanor while compartmentalizing problems. She did well. “The lesson I learned
was clear, that I always wanted to be self-sufficient,” she said. “I took pride in that. My
relationship with money is that it’s a
tool to be self-sufficient, but it’s not something that is part of
who I am.”
After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, she worked at Goldman Sachs as a fixed
income trading strategist, dealing with enormous sums of money that she traded for the house
account. Jon Corzine, her boss, tried to get her to stay at Goldman, but instead she decided the
work was unedifying. “You could be really successful,” she said, “but you’re just contributing to
capital formation.” So after three years she quit and went to Florence, Italy, living there for eight
months before enrolling in Stanford Business School.
After their Thursday night dinner, she invited Jobs over to her Palo Alto apartment on Saturday.
Kat Smith drove down from Berkeley and pretended to be her roommate so she could meet him as
well. Their relationship became very passionate. “They would kiss and make out,” Smith said.
“He was enraptured with her. He would
call me on the phone and ask, ‘What do you think, does
she like me?’ Here I am in this bizarre position of having this iconic person call me.”
That New Year’s Eve of 1989 the three went to Chez Panisse, the famed Alice Waters
restaurant in Berkeley, along with Lisa, then eleven. Something happened at the dinner that caused
Jobs and Powell to start arguing. They left separately, and Powell ended up spending the night at
Kat Smith’s apartment. At nine the next morning there was a knock at the door, and Smith opened
it to find Jobs, standing in the drizzle holding some wildflowers he had picked. “May I come in
and see Laurene?” he said. She was still asleep, and he walked into the bedroom. A couple of
hours went by, while Smith waited in the living room, unable to go in and get her clothes. Finally,
she put a coat on over her nightgown and went to Peet’s Coffee to pick up some food. Jobs did not
emerge until after noon. “Kat, can you come here for a minute?” he asked. They all gathered in the
bedroom. “As you know, Laurene’s
father passed away, and Laurene’s mother isn’t here, and
since you’re her best friend, I’m going to ask you the question,” he said. “I’d like to marry
Laurene. Will you give your blessing?”
Smith clambered onto the bed and thought about it. “Is this okay with you?” she asked Powell.
When she nodded yes, Smith announced, “Well, there’s your answer.”
It was not, however, a definitive answer. Jobs had a way of focusing on something with insane
intensity for a while and then, abruptly,
turning away his gaze. At work, he would focus on what he wanted to, when he wanted to, and
on other matters he would be unresponsive, no matter how hard people tried to get him to engage.
In his personal life, he was the same way. At times he and Powell would indulge in public displays
of affection that were so intense they embarrassed everyone in their presence, including Kat Smith
and Powell’s mother. In the mornings at his Woodside mansion, he would wake Powell up by
blasting the Fine Young Cannibals’ “She Drives Me Crazy” on his tape deck.
Yet at other times he
would ignore her. “Steve would fluctuate between intense focus, where she was the center of the
universe, to being coldly distant and focused on work,” said Smith. “He had the power to focus
like a laser beam, and when it came across you, you basked in the light of his attention. When it
moved to another point of focus, it was very, very dark for you. It was very confusing to Laurene.”
Once she had accepted his marriage proposal on the first day of 1990, he didn’t mention it
again for several months. Finally, Smith confronted him while they were sitting on the edge of a
sandbox in Palo Alto. What was going on? Jobs replied that he needed to feel sure that Powell
could handle the life he lived and the type of person he was. In September she became fed up with
waiting and moved out. The following month, he gave her a diamond engagement ring, and she
moved back in.
In December Jobs took Powell to his favorite vacation spot, Kona Village in Hawaii. He had
started going
there nine years earlier when, stressed out at Apple, he had asked his assistant to
pick out a place for him to escape. At first glance, he didn’t like the cluster of sparse thatched-roof
bungalows nestled on a beach on the big island of Hawaii. It was a family resort, with communal
eating. But within hours he had begun to view it as paradise. There was a simplicity and spare
beauty that moved him, and he returned whenever he could. He especially enjoyed being there that
December with Powell. Their love had matured. The night before Christmas he again declared,
even more formally, that he wanted to marry her. Soon another factor would drive that decision.
While in Hawaii, Powell got pregnant. “We know exactly where it happened,” Jobs later said with
a laugh.
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