“Did you have to hit me where I’m weak? Baby, I couldn’t breathe and rub it in so deep, salt in the wound like you’re laughing right at me.” Taylor Swift Art Challenge:1989 – Track 08 Bad Blood
Based on an ask from the wonderful @upperstories which brought up the idea of the relationship between Hector and Miguel in the Alive!AU being be similar to that of Lilo and her sister Nani from Lilo and Stitch. I laughed out loud at the thought, and I totally adore that movie, so I had to make something out of it. Hope you like it!:D
Also, Miguel is much littler (that’s a word shut up) here than in the movie, around 7 or 8 perhaps
people seemed to like the Teacher Héctor au and I enjoyed it too so here is some more!
Miguel goes to the very school he teaches in but doesn’t have him since they’re family. And Imelda isn’t family here obviously. She’s the school’s intimidating witch principal >:>
“Papa Tengo sed”-I can finally make this reference and there are people who will get it! T.T oh my god you guys have no idea how long I’ve waited to make this joke.
Anyone got any suggestions for what his urban legend name would be? I was thinking something like “The Weeping Musician”. Idk man I’m not good at coming up with this stuff I just like drawing it lmao.
Anyways I’m gonna draw more of this soon, but exams might slow me down a bit 😥
Some doodles of what I imagine what Miguel would look like when he’s older.
Second picture was from another scrapped sketch page. I thought it’d be funny if Miguel had a designated drinking buddy during the holidays. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
I know that in the original idea for Coco there was some talk about Héctor being a tour guide through the land of the dead. That he worked for low pay in basic customer service and hated his job.
Well, I’d like to post an alternative.
Instead of a tour guide for adults, he works with newly transitioned children, because for some reason, he would be the only guide able to calm the little ones down when they first appeared.
The other tour guides had tried their luck- but all returned with crying, terrified little ones, with too many questions and far too many tears, hiding behind volumes of law and stacks of baggage claim papers from the scary skeletons that loomed above them.
It was their lowest paid worker who crouched before a shaking eight year old boy and carefully reached out to pass a hand through black, unruly locks. “Ay, niño, it’s alright! Hey, hey, heyheyhey- it’s alright.” Bigger hands folding over little ones, pushing up a face, carefully reaching behind to the counter besides the stacks of papers stamped with the Bureau seal to pick out a few tissues. “Oye, it’s alright. Estas bien, chico.”
Héctor had always been a tall man, and so sliding down to the floor, back against the desk, his long legs disrupting the social workers moving to and fro and pointing glares in his direction, was no easy feat. Still, he pulled the child close enough to hum old, unfinished ballads and let the child experimentally toy with his skeletal fingers. He’d flex them. Watch the child’s eyes widen. Watch the child observe their own new hand do the same.
“See?” he’d always say with a gentle laugh, adjusting little cotton shirts and wiping runny noses. “Not so scary, am I!”
Héctor always got a name (Tomás) and always got an age (tengo ocho años, señor) and always made them laugh at some absurd joke while the guide from before watched slack jawed and envious.
“How about you and I go to explore la ciudad. I know a place that makes el pan dulce más maravilloso and then you and I will go find your family, ey?” The boy (or girl, whatever child it was, and there would be many, many children) clung tight to his hand and nodded fiercely and followed along, the eyes of the unsuccessful watching them retreat.
It would be jealousy that would fuel the anger of his coworkers. “Héctor the Spector,” they’d call him behind his back. “Seen to the children, but never by his own family.” And another would make a sound rife with ire in agreement and say “he’ll never cross the bridge anyway. Might as well be of some use here.”
Héctor just clenched his fists and focused on his work. Because through the jeers and barbs, he still managed to find children’s families- to relocate and rehome without much trouble.
No one ever knew why Héctor was so good with the children.