Craig tells everyone it’s great when founders are motivated by personal events.
“In this case, personal tragedy,” I add. “You don’t think that’s a red flag?”
“Asha’s right,” Gaby says. “Maybe we need to get a little more confidence around Marco, whether he can build a leadership team as the company scales.”
Cyrus tells everyone he’s going to recommend a full integration with WAI.
The screen blinks and Craig appears, a towel around his neck. The San Fernando Valley is a blur behind him. “I love it,” he says. “It’s just what we need, it’s taking things to the next level.”
“What do you mean by full integration?” Rupert asks.
“We leverage our customer base to get people to sign up for Obit.ly’s service. It’s the same sign-in, same platform, just an add-on to what we offer,” Cyrus explains.
“Only for when you’re dead,” Craig says. “It’s genius.”
Cyrus tells everyone it was my idea. “It wasn’t even on my radar. Being in the same space means the integration can be quicker. We’ll have to build up the team, of course. I think I probably need to spend a couple million in year one. Gaby has modeled it.”
“I don’t know,” Rupert counters. “I’m imagining all the ways this can go wrong, and there are many.”
I can see Cyrus getting irritated. “Such as?”
“Well, for one thing, the system mistaking a very much alive person for a dead one. Imagine waking up to your own obituary.”
Cyrus turns to me. “Asha, what are the chances of that happening?”
I want to say yes, there is a chance of that happening, not least because it’s the first time Rupert has ever agreed with me. But I can’t lie. “Not high,” I say. “There’s a verification process that’s pretty watertight. I do have other concerns, though—”
“Let’s move on, and we can address those in diligence,” Cyrus interrupts.
“I want to hear what Asha’s concerns are,” Rupert says.
Cyrus sits up in his chair, tents his fingers, and gets a scary Zen face on.
“It’s okay,” I say. “I don’t want to waste too much time if there’s consensus on this.”
“This is our go/no-go moment,” Rupert says. “So let’s put everything on the table.”
I blurt it out. “I think Marco is crazy.”
Craig’s screen pixelates, then comes back into focus. “You’re all crazy,” he says, laughing. “That’s why I gave you so much fucking money.”
Gaby clears his throat. “I think what Asha’s trying to say here is that it’s been a little difficult to disambiguate Marco’s passion from what can sometimes appear to be mania.”
“CEOs are all the same,” Craig says. “Rupert, you’ve met your share of loonies, haven’t you?”
Rupert is on the fence, I can tell. He has the same gnawing feeling in the pit of his stomach, and he wants to back me up. But I also know that in the VC jungle, Rupert is a zebra and Craig is a lion. Even if he has reservations, he’s going to defer to the big cat. “I sure have,” he says. “You founders are pretty much all the same.”
“If you’re not an assassin, you can’t do your job. So unless there’s anything else, Asha, I say we put our weight behind Cyrus.”
I should stop here, but I can’t. I address myself to Cyrus. “We are walking into a minefield here, and I really don’t think you’ve weighed the risks.”
“I’ve done my homework, Asha.”
“I’m sorry, Cy, but I don’t think you have.” I turn to the others. “None of you mind that Marco is a potential hazard?”
“No, we don’t mind, Asha,” Craig says, as if he’s just added a lemon to his voice. “In fact, it’s what I want in my CEOs. I want madness, I want ambition, I want fuck-itness. I told you when we first met—were you even listening?—that I want you guys to KILL EVERYONE.” He’s rubbing his palm against his forehead, and then suddenly, his video feed goes dark. “I gotta go,” he says. “I need a gong bath. Let’s just vote.”
“All in favor of merging Obit.ly onto the WAI platform, raise your hand,” Cyrus says. Cyrus, Rupert, and Jules all raise their hands.
“I’m in,” Craig says.
“All against?”
Gaby and I raise our hands.