pengychan:

babycharmander:

frida-kahlos-unibrow:

Some quick doodles of some characters from a fanfic called “Down to the Bone”! Here we have Ezequiel Del Rio (Cheque ), young Socorro and Ernesto. And more amazing characters to come in this fic! I’m loving it so far and I would definitely recommend it to those who love Coco. And to the author: you did an astounding job with this one! I’ll link the first chapter down below 🙂

https://archiveofourown.org/works/13333533/chapters/30521727

@pengychan !

I think I might be about to have a heart attack so hey don’t mind me if I am not coherent at all, but I absolutely love these, thank you so much! : D Cheque looks so cute in your style and I’m just in love with dancing Socorro!
Also Ernesto’s face is just perfect, that’s 100% the face of someone who needs several drinks. That’s definitely been one of the thoughts stuck in his mind throughout the entire fic. 

Thanks again, this made my evening! : D

Coco Characters by Characters they’d play in Overwatch

Because I was playing overwatch, and my mind wandered to this. :l

Miguel: Flex player. Prefers playing hitscan characters.

Héctor: Support main. Can’t play dps to save his life. Leaves tanking to Imelda, who helps him boost his rank in comp (he’s silver, she’s platinum). Mostly plays Lúcio, but he’s decent with the other supports too.

Imelda: Tank main. Gets irritated whenever someone asks why she doesn’t play Mercy if she’s a girl. Mostly plays main tanks (Reinhardt, Orisa), but can play an off-tank in a pinch.

Ernesto: That guy who instalocks dps and sucks the whole game, but refuses to switch off. Claims he’s doing his job by pointing to gold damage/elim medals. He also plays cheese characters frequently and triggers the hell out of the enemy team. Probably got carried to diamond/masters.

can we get a peek at what you’re writing?

pengychan:

Sure!

Héctor exchanged another glance with Imelda, and a nod, before he turned and walked into the street Ezequiel had come running from.

In the back of his mind, a memory tried to resurface: that of two children chasing each other through dark streets in Santa Cecilia far past their bedtime, scared of the darkness but ready to die before admitting as much aloud, letting out with fake howls and hoots and trying to catch each other by surprise. There had been a few loud shrieks – Ernesto shrieked the loudest, Héctor remembered – and several annoyed people yelling from windows that it was past midnight, some people have to work, chamacos, go home before we give you a beating.

They’d laughed it all off, of course, the threats and their own childish fear and the relief that followed the shrieks, when they’d found each other again and headed back together, laughing and joking. The dark was not so scary, then… but then Héctor remembered another walk in the dark, one to a train station he would never reach, and the memory turned sour. They’d laughed and joked then, too, and Héctor had thought Ernesto meant it. If he’d noticed a blankness on his face from time to time, if his gaze had seemed too distant and yet too fixed at the same time, he had thought nothing of it.

You thought he would never, until he did.

Héctor scowled, and chased the memory away. Dwelling in it would do no good; it was all in the past, deader than they were. Whatever – whoever – he would find in those alleys, it wouldn’t be his best friend. The boy he’d known would not come running out of there like he used to, like Ezequiel had. He was not there.

He wasn’t anywhere.