Luis' Illustrated Blog

Simpsons Storyboard artist. Artist and storyteller. Exploring how to make a living, by being creative.
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Monthly Archives: October 2011

The Tower’s Alchemist Ch 2. Some more designs for my film.

October 27, 2011 in ART, BOOKS, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

I was taken off episode 12 this week and put back on episode 11.  It seems that episode 11 got some MORE rewrites and changes that needed to be story boarded.  They asked me to do it so I am.  There were rewrites in three out of the four acts.  I finished Acts 2 and 3 pretty quickly. Act 1 had some heavy rewrites so I’m hoping to get them done by the end of the day today.

ART

This week, I clarified for myself, what the Lead Sorcerers, wrist device would look like.  I also designed what the Female Sorceress’ swords would look like:

more-rough-designs.jpg

It’s gotten to the point know where, I have to quickly design small things like, Rob’s backpack.  Lastly I designed the hot dog vendor, who has a speaking role at the start of the film.  When I designed him, I was going for “Hispanic stereotype”.  For a secondary character, he’s actually kinda important for the story.

If you’re wondering why my drawing output seems so low, it’s because most of my time is taken up by the writing of the script.  Things are going so well with that, I might actually be done with it by the end of next week.

If I am, then all I’ll need to do is record the dialogue and I’m on my way.  It might be possible  for me to even start story boarding without the dialogue too.  Still, I’d want it recorded as soon as I can.

BOOKS

Last week I posted Chapter 1 of my wife’s book THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST:

To get the $2.99 Kindle copy of the book:

To get a hard copy of the book:

This week I’ve posted, Chapter 2.

Enjoy.

CLICK HERE to read Chapter 1.

Chapter two 

I really wanted to tell Brande to take his glass of dry Sherry and get the hell out of my office, but you can’t say that to a wizard without there being trouble. I lowered my gaze and rustled papers on my desk hoping maybe he’d get the hint, but he obviously felt that he had a few last words to say.

“I’ll probably be able to see you again in a few months. It’s becoming more difficult to enter and leave Prague…I hope you understand.”

“Well,” I lifted my gaze and met his, “that’s what happens when you let a gang of Nazis run into your territory.”

“Isabella—”

“When we’re over here, I’m Emelie.”

He waved his hand and took another sip of Sherry. “Of course, Emelie. If we had been ready, perhaps we could’ve fought them off without any trouble. But now…” he shook his head and it made me feel a pang of guilt for being dismissive.

“We’re all trying to do what we can, right?” I placed my hand over his in a conciliatory gesture. I knew how he felt when the Gray Tower did nothing as the SS and German Armed Forces rolled into Czechoslovakia and took over. However, the Order of Wizards couldn’t make a move without being detected by certain enemies of our own.

I knew he would’ve been first in line to fight off the enemy despite that fact, and that’s what I was already doing in my own way. I had to admit though that I couldn’t escape the nagging feeling that we were so wrapped up in living for a cause that sometimes it felt like life passed us by. He and I could have easily enjoyed our drinks over a dinner table in a dimly lit nightclub with our bodies swaying to the beat of music. It would have been a nice change of scene from the solitude and monotony of my cramped office.

Knowing Brande though, he probably thought this was just fine—which was a shame because what girl wouldn’t want to be seen in public with him? I didn’t realize my hand was still touching his as I thought about all this and he gave me a quizzical look (but he didn’t withdraw his hand, either).

I pulled my hand away, a little flushed, and just then Ian walked in carrying a file. Brande acknowledged him with a nod and Ian did the same. When Brande faced me again I could see Ian pointing toward the left wall at an informational poster that you could find posted in nearly every pub in London nowadays. It portrayed men wearing military uniforms, frozen in laughter with a group of women hanging onto them. A caption at the bottom of the poster read: What you say to your friends…could be heard by the enemy!

I always laughed at that poster hanging in here, but nevertheless I’ve seen some inexperienced operatives unwittingly betray themselves and their cohorts by not taking that motto to heart.

“Emelie,” Ian cleared his throat, “the file is ready.” He furtively glanced at Brande.

“I swear I tried to make him leave,” I said as I shrugged my shoulders. Ian was even less patient with Brande’s presence than I was.

Brande pulled a package from a hidden pocket inside his trench coat. “Your emerald spectacles, jade powder, and red garnet lipstick.”

“Thank you.”

I didn’t always have time to make or procure enchanted items, and I appreciated whenever he delivered them. Emerald granted the ability to see in the dark; jade’s healing powers had saved me on several occasions from grievous wounds and poison, and I used red garnet sparingly as it inspired romantic desires and aggression. I learned a long time ago to manipulate the magical qualities in these stones and work them into everyday items. Whipping out a stone isn’t very subtle, and in my line of work a lack of subtlety could get you killed.

Brande handed me the coveted items and finished his Sherry. “Perhaps you’ll come to the Gray Tower once you’re done playing spy with the British.” He rose from his seat and shouldered his way past Ian, leaving us alone in the office. I didn’t know why, but Brande’s comment stung me.

I looked at Ian. “I know what you’re going to say—”

“I trust you, not him. Besides, don’t you think it’s all part of a nefarious plot that the Gray Tower sends him over? If Bernadine actually did her job and stopped gushing over him at the reception desk, then maybe I could get a few words out of the bloke.”

I let out an irritated sigh. “I swear sometimes you act as if you don’t want a wizard on staff. If that’s the case, then you shouldn’t have recruited me.”

He shook his head as if saying he wasn’t going down that road today. “Look, when are you going to let us take this out?” He glanced at the other half of the office where an empty desk and chair stood collecting dust, and where notes and pictures clung to the wall.

“Why do you suddenly care?” My eyes narrowed. I had noticed when I first joined the Special Operations Executive that all the men had their own offices while all the women had to pair up and share, sometimes three to an office.

My officemate and friend was a girl named Stella, whose husband died in a battle last year. She wanted to help the Resistance in any way she could and successfully ran missions for us, but she hasn’t reported back to us since January and now it was the middle of June.

“We’ve got a new recruit, I think you’ll like her.”

“Not interested. What do you have for me?” The last thing I needed was a wide-eyed new girl following me around talking about how swell it was to spy on the Nazis.

He opened the file to reveal a dossier and pointed toward a profile picture of an older gentleman. “I presume you’ve heard of Dr. Veit Heilwig?”

“The scientist? Yes.”

“For the past three months Allied forces have been taking heavy blows from the Nazis on the Western Front. The bastards have been violating the Geneva Protocol and unleashing a new chemical weapon on our soldiers. We have evidence that—”

“There may be more than just chemicals in those weapons?” I fondled the Agate stone set in my ring.

He nodded. “Do you remember that incident with the poisoned food and water?”

“Believe me, I’m not forgetting that anytime soon.”

The contaminated goods had unwittingly been dispersed among Ally soldiers throughout Europe. Over a thousand had died before it could be counteracted and hundreds more were still lying in hospital beds, strangely disfigured and barely alive. All we could do was separate and destroy the contaminated food, and there was still no known cure.

“That was Heilwig’s work. Now he’s perfected it…they’re calling it The Plague. At this rate he’ll win the war for Hitler and the Black Wolves, and that’s exactly why we need another alchemist to go up against him, neutralize the new chemical weapons he’s developed, and take him out.”

“You want me to kill him?”

“No, take him out of France. We want to extract him.”

“Why do you want him alive?” And how exactly did they want me to kidnap him? You can’t just walk up to a warlock and cuff him and tell him to come along. Next time I’ll save my plaintive musings about life passing me by in favor of me wanting to just live another day. This was going to be a tough mission.

“Just…read the dossier. I’ve got MI6 breathing down my neck over this one and Morton’s just dying for an excuse to discredit us.”

“My goodness, we wouldn’t want that, now would we?” Discredit happened to be the least of my worries buddy—I could be rotting in Dr. Meier’s Nazi experimental program by next week if I fail. Half the things I heard about it I refused to believe and the other half I resolved to never find out through experience. I swore this would be my last assignment, and then if I had any sense left I’d gracefully exit the stage and go quietly live my life elsewhere…preferably with a handsome guy who didn’t mind that I could create explosions and induce heart attacks.

Ian rolled his eyes. Sometimes I wondered if he wanted to throttle me for my backtalk. “Report to the hangar tomorrow at the appointed time so Richard can take you over to Paris. And don’t be late.”

“Ian…”

“What is it?”

I felt like squirming in my seat. “You got my resignation letter, right? I put it on your desk this morning.”

He pursed his lips. “I wanted to give you some time to think it over. That Denmark job really got to you, didn’t it?”

“I’ll do this last assignment, but promise me you’ll have the final paperwork ready to sign when I return from Paris.” My shoulders tensed in anticipation of his objections, and about how much SOE needed me.

“All right then,” he said in a low voice. “I don’t want to see you go, but if that’s what you want…”

As he turned and headed toward the door with his gangly walk, I glanced at the clock on the wall and winced. Ideally my routine would have been to nestle in my reclining chair and eat dinner by 7 p.m., but instead 8 o’ clock stared back at me without apology. I flipped through the dossier, noting the most important details and memorizing Dr. Heilwig’s face, knowing that when I’m dropped into Paris tomorrow evening I wouldn’t have the dossier to reference nor any identification papers or passports on me.

We did this for two reasons: an agent’s counterfeit identification could be damaged or lost during transport anyway, and in the case of arrest, the Gestapo often found it difficult to verify or prove she was a spy. I usually obtained papers from trusted sources on an as-needed basis, but if I didn’t need them, then I did not carry papers. When I first began this, I found it all exciting because it allowed me to be anyone I wanted, but after a few months I ended up feeling like I was no one.

Sometimes I had to remind myself that Emelie was just my code name, and that her preferred mannerisms or activities weren’t necessarily the ones Isabella George liked. My officemate Stella had gone to France often under the name Angela Wyatt, and had chosen it because her mother’s first name was Angela and she obsessed over the 16th Century poet Thomas Wyatt.

After my first few missions I grew apathetic in choosing names. One day Ian suggested Emelie because he said when he was younger he had always wanted a little sister by that name. Since he had never gotten one and I was the closest thing to it, he said I should go with the moniker, and I’ve been using it ever since.

My lips curved into a slight smile at remembering this but then turned into a frown as I thought about Stella’s failure to report back. Wherever she was, I hoped that she had only been delayed and needed to hide with the French Resistance or was already en route to London. In any case, I wanted Stella’s belongings to remain here untouched if she happened to return—I didn’t want her to think we gave up on her so quickly. In keeping with my weekly routine, I grabbed my dusty handkerchief from my desk drawer and wiped off her belongings.

I wondered with a twinge of sadness if anyone would do that for me if I had been missing for five months, and I didn’t even want to think about what Ian would have to tell my family under those circumstances: So sorry, your daughter wasn’t really working for the U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain—she was gallivanting about Europe engaging in counter-missions against the Nazis because we couldn’t afford Hitler’s occult powers to gain an advantage over Allied forces.

It would kill my mother and brother to find out about me that way, and though pride kept me from saying it, the longer Stella went missing, the more anxious I grew that I may very well be next. Then what? Without a doubt, this would have to be my last mission behind enemy lines.

 

When I arrived at my flat, I pulled out the few supplies I would take with me to Paris: a wad of francs, the enchanted items Brande brought me, and my golden alchemist’s knife. I placed them on my nightstand and then headed into the kitchen to fix myself dinner. I went through the cabinets and refrigerator but found nothing that piqued my appetite. My friend Jane Lewis usually came home around this time and she cooked enticing meals like lamb stew and meatloaf. Most importantly, she generously shared them with me.

I still hopelessly tried to make an American dish every now and then but then I would only end up frustrated and yearning for home while my belly groaned. I decided to see what Jane was cooking and went downstairs to her flat on the first floor. I knocked a couple of times and she answered the door, wearing a dirty apron and wiping flour from her hands. Her freckled face broke into a smile and she welcomed me in.

“Please, have a seat, Isabella. I was just finishing the liver sandwiches.” She went back into her kitchen and pulled a dish out of the oven.

“Liver sandwiches?” I wanted to grimace but unless I was cooking for myself I had no right to object.

“Well, it’s more like a meat-filled pastry.”

“Filled with liver?” As if I were supposed to overlook that fact.

“Not everyone in the world eats just loads of fried cows and cheese.”

“This is going to be interesting.”

“I’m trying to follow the ration recipes from Woman’s Weekly.” She gestured toward the magazine on her coffee table.

“Is it that bad?” I went over and grabbed the magazine and flipped through its pages. I took a few moments to scan its housekeeping articles and recipes.

“It’s starting to be. If you went to buy food more often, you’d know.” She arranged the liver sandwiches on two plates and invited me to come sit with her at the dining table.

“You’re cooking an awful lot lately.” I took a bite and gave silent thanks that she had at least seasoned the meat.

“Well I’m just honing my housekeeping skills, you know.” She bit into her sandwich and turned her left hand to reveal a diamond engagement ring on her finger. She must have slipped it on in the kitchen.

“Congratulations, Jane.” With a smile I got up and threw my arms around her. “I didn’t know…have I been away that long?”

“It was all so sudden, even I’m still surprised.” Her face simply glowed.

“Garret is a lucky man.” I frowned when she took it upon herself to plop another sliver of sandwich into my mouth. I wondered if she hid some stew or dumplings in the refrigerator and this was all to torture me.

“And it came at the perfect time. I was just thinking last week what I was going to do with myself.”

My smile faded. “You were tired, weren’t you?”

She nodded and tears formed in her eyes. “I don’t want you to get the wrong idea. I still believe in what we’re fighting for, but we all have to retire some time, right?”

“Sure we do.”

Jane’s sister, Anna, had been one of three Special Operations Executive agents arrested by Nazis last October in the Netherlands and immediately sentenced to death by firing squad. They had no pity on her because she was a woman; the SS shot her down and threw her body into a heaping pile of other victims.

“Besides,” she wiped her face, “I’m getting old and I want babies. All my girlfriends who I grew up with are married off and raising families.”

“Well I’m glad for you, Jane. You deserve a happy life with Garret.”

I asked her to recount the whole proposal from beginning to end. I asked to see her ring again and secretly felt a mixture of excitement and envy. Afterward, I offered to clear the table and wash dishes so she wouldn’t try to feed me anything else. We made small talk the rest of the time and she reminded me about some letters that she had been holding for me. I thanked her and continued cleaning the kitchen, wiping down the counters and saving scraps of leftover food.

I couldn’t help but steal glances of her engagement ring every few minutes and savor the sweet smoothness of the gold it was made of. As an alchemist, I had a natural ability to taste the metallic essence of metals. I eyed the shining round-cut diamond set in the middle and wondered if I would cry or jump with excitement if someone ever proposed to me.

Though my life as a spy did have its share of excitement, I couldn’t deny the mental, physical, and even spiritual drain that this line of work had on me. I remembered days when I would refuse to get out of bed because weariness or distress dragged me down. Even when Ian had sent a car for me, I wouldn’t answer. At other times I’d return from a mission with a stone cold face and impenetrable heart, and then as soon as I stepped through my doorway I would start bawling. I called it being tired, and I understood what Jane felt.

I wasn’t going to lie to myself, I did want to one day be married, move somewhere close to my brother and his wife so we could watch our kids grow up together, and stroll through my quiet little neighborhood not having to wonder if the friendly neighbor down the street was an enemy operative with a gun behind his back. I wanted to be in control of how I lived, and I just couldn’t reconcile this with living and dying by others’ orders.

“I should go back up to my flat. I’m going to Paris tomorrow.” I came back into the living room and leaned over the sofa to give Jane a peck on the cheek.

“Be careful, do you hear me?”

“You know I will, because I want to make it back for your wedding. When will it be?”

“March, of next year.” She got up and walked me over to the door.

“I think I can make it back by then.”

She laughed. “You’d better. And I want to come to yours one day.”

“I’d have to find a guy to stick with me first.”

We said our goodnights and I headed back upstairs, feeling loneliness creep upon me. I quickly changed and got into bed, and began browsing through the letters Jane had given me. Some were bills, others were solicitations for mail order catalogs, and of course I received my letter from Jonathan. I tossed the others aside and opened his cryptic letter written under the pseudonym Sherman Woods.

I had told him a long time ago that since I had access to “sensitive information in the ambassador’s office,” that my employer frowned upon casual and steady communication with family and friends. Johnnie took it upon himself to start writing me once a month using a silly code language we used to communicate in when we were children.

I always found his letters, and the effort he put into them, amusing and gratefully welcomed. In fact, I found the elaborate system we had come up with quite impressive. I think the codes would actually work if I wanted to use them for a real mission. As I read his account of his weekly triumphs and worries, as well as how mother was faring, I wistfully thought of the look on his face if I were to just show up on his doorstep.

Well, perhaps I could do that when I’m done with this mission. The sooner I extracted Heilwig and got rid of The Plague, the sooner I could be finished and truly go home. I slowly drifted into a restless sleep hoping for this outcome, and of course, wondering what my final assignment would be like.

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The Tower’s Alchemist Chapter 1. Designing Sorcerer gizmos.

October 20, 2011 in ART, BOOKS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

I started work on show 12 this week. Last week I just barely managed to finish my boards. There was more work on them than I thought.  I’m not sure how successful I was with them.  The director was out of town last week.  I hope they can use them.

Meanwhile, the show I’m working on is pretty epic but the rewrite doesn’t seem too bad.  I hope I have an easier time on these boards.

ART

Okay, so,  this week I got an opportunity to design a few things.  Starting with the new Winged Zombie Ape:

zombie-ape-and-arm-device.jpg

He’ll be more scruffy than it’s “brother”.  He will have more of a death’s head look.  No lips on him, just sharp ugly teeth, and his wings will be shredded.

On the second half of the page, I began designing the new devices for the Sorcerers.

In the world of my story, Sorcerers get their magick by binding themselves with a demon.  They access that power through blood.  Mostly their own blood.  At first, I thought that I should give them all daggers that they would use to cut themselves. Then I thought it would be very impractical to be doing that all the time. Especially in a fight so I tried thinking up alternatives. I couldn’t think of anything  and I told my wife Alesha about my problem.  She then pitched the idea that Sorcerers could have a device that they could use that would extract blood from them on the go.  I was like,

“Brilliant!” It’s a modern answer to the question.  Simply use technology to make it easier for them to cast spell. What a fun idea.  So I came up with the idea that they have these devices on their arms that have, like an, IV type tube connected to their vein. They press a button near their palm, like Spider-Man’s web shooters, and a little bit of blood squirts out. Each Sorcerer’s device is slightly custom made according to the theme of their powers.

Pictured above are two of the three devices.  The rougher, slightly vague ones floating around the page are some ideas for the third device. The woman’s theme, has been changed to blades, so her device looks like scaled armor.  The long haired Sorcerer’s theme was changed to entropy, so his device looks like it’s made out of finger bones with a tail bone at the front.  The balls on the device are a type of magick weapon he tends to throw.

The claws on his finger are something else. It’s my first pass at them so they seem a big crazy.  He doesn’t always have does claws out.  When he wants them, he casts a spell that produces them.  They’re SUPPOSE to look like talons. I’m not sure they look right at the moment.  I’ll need to work on them.

Feels good to be working on my project again.

BOOKS

As promised, I now officially putting up a few chapters from my wife’s book THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST.  We’ve been getting a lot of good feedback from people who have read it.  It’s good to hear.  Give it a try.

To get the $2.99 Kindle copy of the book:

To get a hard copy of the book:

Okay, so, here’s:

CHAPTER ONE

 

I never imagined my first trip to Denmark would include crouching in a forest in the dark of night, but at least the beech trees gave Lyder and me much needed cover. I rose to my feet and stood over him, jerking my head to the right to indicate that we needed to pack up and head out. When he waved me off, I shut the transmitter case with my foot and trained my sten gun on him.

He glared at me. “I wasn’t done with my radio transmission.”

“You went over by five minutes. That means they’ll be coming.” I had little patience for people who did things that would likely get me killed. 

He pulled out a pistol and grabbed the case. “I’m ready.”

I flinched when the first gunshot rang. It took the SS little effort to pinpoint our position. Lyder jumped to his feet and ran with me through the forest. I breathed in through my nose and out my mouth, like I’d do when taking a jog. I felt a cold lump in the pit of my stomach as my shoes haphazardly crushed dry leaves and twigs beneath them. We heard voices, dogs barking, and where the forest cleared we saw the headlights of a trekker sitting in the middle of the road.

Great, we’ve just been flanked. 

With heavy breaths, we paused and pressed ourselves against the trunk of a tree as if it were all the protection we needed. 

“Any bright ideas, sergeant?” I pulled out my golden knife and began carving repetitions of two alchemical symbols into the soft earth: Fire and Air.

“We make a stand and fight,” he said, dropping the case and pulling out another pistol. “They’ll likely force us to surrender once they see my uniform.”

“Bad plan.” They might take an officer of the Danish army as a prisoner of war, but if they caught a woman in civilian clothing with a machine gun aimed at them, they’d kill me on the spot—or take me in for interrogation with a nice dose of torture, and then kill me.

“Drop your weapons,” a voice on a loud hailer commanded first in English and then in German. It came from the trekker. From the other side I could hear the dogs’ howling grow louder and men’s boots trampling crisp leaves.

Lyder raised his guns and fired at one of the SS officers who had made his way down from the trekker. It looked like he was hit in the shoulder, but he quickly reciprocated the gunfire. I took the opposite side and aimed my gun, hitting him with a burst of bullets. The officer grunted and fell to the ground. I began feeding my Fire and Air symbols with energy, slowly building up the power I needed in them. Lyder shivered and stared at me.

“What are you doing?” he asked.

“Saving our lives.” My right hand shook as a warning but I ignored it and continued. I held off the effects of the spell just long enough so I could blast the other men in range.

We moved to another tree when the men from behind sent gunfire and their vicious dogs our way. When they were close enough, I released the symbols and sparks began forming in the air. The sparks grew into flames, and joined by Air, became a whirlwind of fire. I directed the firestorm toward everyone behind us, and then confusion and panic broke out. Some of the men fell back while others were caught in the raging flames and burned alive. Still, others ran for cover and waited. I nudged Lyder, who simply stared at the spectacle, and urged him to follow me.

“Emelie, why are you going toward the trekker?” he asked.

“A trekker only holds two at most. I’d rather go against one soldier than twenty.” I felt something wet trickle down my nose and knew it was blood. I relinquished any remaining hold I had on the firestorm, and with fear I awaited the inevitable physical exhaustion to creep in.

We headed up the dirt embankment and saw that the trekker still had its lights on, but no one moved there or made any further demands on the loud hailer. Where did the second man go? Lyder suddenly shouted a warning, but it was too late. The man we were looking for had wrapped his arm around Lyder’s neck from behind and lifted him up against the embankment with little effort. Lyder dropped his weapons and began kicking his legs in the air and clawing at the man’s arm, but to no avail. His strength was simply inhuman.

“Drop your weapon,” he said, “or I’ll break his neck.”

I placed it on the ground in front of me and held my hands up in the air. “Who are you?”

He released Lyder and made a quick blow to the back of his head to knock him unconscious. “A rich man, once I hand you over. They like collecting Tower Slaves.” 

He jumped from the top of the embankment and landed on his feet. He wore no uniform, only a dark sweater and trousers. I could sense the taint of dark magic on him and I cursed at myself for wasting so much of my strength earlier.

“I’m not with the Gray Tower.” I trembled from fatigue and lowered my arms.

“Doesn’t matter.” He gave a smug smile, watching me reel from the effects of my previous strong rush of magic. 

He pulled out a pair of Czech swivel cuffs, and when I sensed the amount of iron present in them, I lifted my wrists and allowed him to cuff me. Obviously this warlock wasn’t an alchemist. As soon as the cuffs clicked shut, I threw my arms up high and over his head and pulled him toward me so that the cuffs pressed into the back of his neck and we were locked in an embrace. I manipulated the iron, letting it do the work for me and turning it into a weapon that would corrode and blacken his flesh. He began struggling and screeching, unable to hit me with a spell because I was right up against him. He did put aside the pain long enough to figure out that he could strangle me though, and wrapped his hands around my neck and squeezed with the ferocity of desperation. 

There we were, in near silence, arms around each other and neither one intending to let go until the other dropped dead. Tonight however, would not be that night for me. A spray of blood hit me across the face as the corrosion from the iron cuffs ate away into part of his neck. I fell down with the weight of his body, and coughed and sputtered. After I managed to wriggle free, I tried to find a key on him but his pockets turned up nothing—except a business card for a Dr. Falk Meier, which made me shudder.

My wrists burned from the spell and my legs felt like rubber. I stumbled over to my sten gun and picked it up before limping over to Lyder. I prodded him and called his name a few times, and uttered a silent prayer of thanks when his eyes blinked open. “Lyder, we have to get out of here.” I coughed again, but this time it was due to the forest fire smoke billowing toward us.

“Where are my guns?” he asked with a groan.

“There.” I nodded over to my right and he rushed toward the weapons and reclaimed them. 

The other men who had run off were now regrouping and we could hear them in the distance. I helped him to his feet and we dashed south alongside the road, trying to make it back into town where my safe house stood. I was already running out of breath and hardly managed to keep up with him. 

“You couldn’t find a key?” He glanced at my wrists and then his gaze went back to the road.

My eyes narrowed. “Yes, but then I decided that I liked wearing Czechoslovakian handcuffs.”

I stumbled and nearly fell, but he caught me and pulled me along with him at a quick pace. I had to give him credit—he wasn’t going to stop for anything. When we reached town, a few resistance fighters who had been appointed as lookouts signaled to us and guided us through back alleys until we reached the safe house. Once inside, Lyder immediately shed his uniform jacket and grabbed a bottle of liquor. I, on the other hand, asked my hostess Kanja if she knew how to pick locks.

She grabbed her smallest blade from the kitchen and held it up with a grimace. “I don’t know what to do,” she said.

“It’s okay, I’ll walk you through it.” I sat at her kitchen table and held out my wrists.

She sat across from me with a frightened expression. “Perhaps Sergeant Lyder—”

“He’s busy getting drunk, thank you.”

“I’m not drunk yet,” Lyder said. “Can’t you transmute those cuffs anyway?”

“Maybe one day I’ll be able to. Kanja, my wrists are badly hurt. Would you mind?”

She sucked in a deep breath. “Then…tell me what to do.”

I guided her through each step, using encouraging words and a soothing voice. When the cuffs clicked open I winced and gave her a pained smile. “Thank you. You’re a very brave young woman.”

She couldn’t have been older than eighteen, but then losing one’s parents and joining the Resistance made one grow up rather quickly. I looked up at Lyder when he set a glass in front of me and poured me a drink. He had grown much more subdued.

“To another day of cheating death,” he said, finishing off the rest of the bottle.

“Just remember not to go over a thirty-minute broadcast. Ever.”

“God, I’m going to have a headache in the morning,” he said, rummaging through Kanja’s cabinets.

“I’m going to be aching all over,” I complained. I was so exhausted from the fight that I didn’t think I had the energy to mend my wrists with magic. I thanked Kanja once more when she went over to the sink and brought a wet towel for me. I had forgotten that my face was bloodstained.

I wiped my forehead and cheeks clean, and as soon as I downed my drink I felt sick. The house suddenly quaked and unnatural screeches filled the air. People began shouting and screaming, and the sound of gunshots popped in long bursts. I didn’t even have to look out the window to know that Black Wolves had landed. 

“Get into the closet!” I rose from my seat and shoved Kanja toward the bedroom. Lyder was on my heels.

“What’s going on out there?” he asked, as I pulled them both inside and shut the door.

“Everyone, quiet. Don’t move, don’t speak, and don’t breathe.” I sucked in a quick breath when the pain in my wrists flared up, but I managed to get us into the compartment behind the secret panel in the back wall.

I crouched in the compartment and closed my eyes. I emptied my mind of any fear or expectations and focused only on cloaking my abilities. A Circle of Protection would’ve just served as a beacon for the Wolves—I needed to hide, to be nothing to them.

We heard more gunshots and screams. Somewhere nearby glass shattered and a car screeched before colliding into something. When the house shook again with a crash, we thought a grenade had hit part of the house. We thought better of it when it sounded like something heavy with talons came walking down the hallway and scratching up the hardwood floor. I opened my eyes when I heard a grunt, and through a crack in the panel we saw the Black Wolf’s shadow blot out the stream of light coming from beneath the door. Lyder pressed his hand over his mouth and Kanja pulled out a tiny crucifix and held it close. 

Lyder looked like he would sick up at any moment when a set of claws, attached to a human-looking hand, reached beneath the door and spread out. I continued concentrating on cloaking myself and lightly extended it to the others in the closet. My head throbbed and I felt feverish. I knew that if I kept pushing myself that I’d faint. I think the only thing that kept me from passing out and hitting the floor was the fact that I wouldn’t be able to do it quietly.

The claws ripped the door open with a yank, and I feared the false panel that separated us would not remain secret for long. A garbled voice from outside called to the Wolf and it pulled away, making a long whoosh that resounded throughout the hallway. The kitchen window shattered and the menacing presence that permeated the house dissipated. 

None of us moved or spoke for nearly a half hour. Lyder licked his dry lips and finally stuttered. “T-they said if our government surrendered, that they wouldn’t send the Black Wolves.”

I shook my head. “They’re a bunch of liars who can’t be trusted. Put that in your next radio broadcast.”

Lyder groaned. “I left my radio set out in the forest.”

Kanja cleared her throat. “Is it safe to go outside now?”

“It’s best we stay here a little longer. Just in case.” I placed my hand on her shoulder. My wrists felt slightly numb.

“And you said the Gray Tower trained you?” Lyder threw me a dubious glance.

“Do you want to go fight a half-monster that likes to eat people for lunch? I don’t get into tangles with Wolves unless I have to.” Besides, I was so drained that I didn’t even think I could get up and move, even if I had wanted to.

“What time is your pilot coming to pick you up?” Lyder asked.

“Midnight. I think I’ll be ready by then.”

“I hope we can see you again,” Kanja said with a weak smile.

“I hope so too. Hopefully when we’re not under the threat of a painful death.”

Lyder chuckled. “Fits the job description, doesn’t it?”

“Then maybe I need to find a new job.” 

I knew I said that every few weeks, but this time I think I meant it. How many more times would I push my limits and run weak and tired with a bloody nose? Or get trapped in a closet with a Black Wolf sniffing at me? Kanja had no business being my host, but she was the only one who volunteered—and probably the only one left alive. 

She looked at me with triumph in her eyes, probably unaware of how close we all were to evisceration. I felt guilty at both having her involved and the prospect of never returning to help. In my heart though, I knew the truth that I’d have to speak aloud when I made it back to Baker Street—I was tired, and at this stage I’d be of use to no one.

 

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

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Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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URBAN REGGIE, a new animated cartoon. THE SIMPSONS gets two more seasons. Started working on my cartoon again.

October 13, 2011 in ART, BOARD GAMES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, VIDEOS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

So last Friday, was a bit tense at work over the whole actors signing to do another season. At least it was for me.  Even though I tried not to think about it, I couldn’t help but be a little anxious about whether or not I’d have the job after this current season of the show was over.  It was pretty much a typical day at the office and looking around you would have never guessed that somewhere, some people where out there deciding our livelihood without us being able to do anything about it.

On the one hand, we’ve been through it before. On the other hand, this somehow seemed a little more tense than prior years.

Sometimes I forgot that it was happening though, so I was mostly fine.  It was only when someone came in and asked about it or talked about it, that I started worrying again.  Still, I had had a talk with my current director, the day before, who didn’t really seem to think it was a big deal.  This helped set my mind at ease at times.

That said, it was a relief to hear that the show was going to go on for another two seasons.  It would be VERY nice, if it went on for three more after that.  Here’s hoping…

BOOKS

I know I said I’d post some of my wife’s book this week, but I think I’ll wait till next week for that.  Especially since, I think the hard copy of the her book will be available for purchase then.  This week, I thought I’d talk about a different project…

VIDEO

My friend and co-worker Erick Tran is branching out. Erick has his finger in a LOT of different pies. This time around, he’s trying to raise money to produce a season of his animated cartoon for the web. He’s put all the info on Kickstarter.

If you’ve never heard of Kickstarter, it’s a website that helps you “crowd fund” projects that you would like to get off the ground.  The way it works is, you post up a project with a video of what it’s about. Then people support you by  donating however amount of money they would like to donate and in return, they get some kind of benefit you provide for helping out.  Each Kickstarter project has a goal it’s trying to meet and a deadline to meet it.  If the goal isn’t reached, the donators do not get charged for their donation, and therefore they don’t pay. BUT the product doesn’t raise any money and the donators don’t get any benefits either.

Erick‘s goal is $100,000 by Tuesday November 8th. Depending on your donation, you can actually have an Executive Producer title on this cartoon.

Here’s Erick to talk more about what he’s up to:

If you’re interested, CLICK HERE to see how you can help.  You can donate an amount as low as a dollar.

BOARD GAMES/BLOG

So I was made aware of this blog post by Rose King, who wrote an post naming THE TEN WORST BOARD GAMES EVER CREATED.

Number 10 is DOCTOR RUTH’S GAME OF GOOD SEX and it all goes downhill from there. Check it out for a good laugh.

ART

I started working on my cartoon again.  I mostly got time to start actually writing my “script” but I did get some drawing in.  I’ve changed enough of the details of my story so that I now have to start doing some new designs of something things.  One of them being, one of my Winged Apes.  It’s now going to be a Zombie Winged Ape or something that looks much more like a “dead” looking Ape. Here are my first attempts at the design of the face:

zombie-ape.jpg

I don’t think this is what I want but I think I now know what I DO want.

I’ll have more drawings on my project ready for next week.

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

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And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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Simpsons negotiations. My wife’s book: THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST.

October 6, 2011 in BOOKS, FAMILY, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

So of the time of this writing, the news broke out about how Fox is asking the actors to take a pay cut. I would like to say that the studio is “all abuzz” with the news, but we’re not.  It’s kinda, business as usual.  Naturally there’s some tension. We ALL want to keep working on the show. We ALL want to keep our jobs. We ALL want it to continue.

Everyone is keeping an eye on the situation but we know we can’t do much about it. Worrying about it, isn’t going to help. The word around the more optimistic artists at the studio is that things will work themselves out for, at least, two more season.  Just so that we could hit season 25 and maybe THEN the show will end.  If the show HAS to end, this is what we all hope for.  Especially since, if it ends now, this way, the show wouldn’t end on it’s own terms and it would be a pretty lame way for the longest animated TV show to go.  We’re hoping that we will get a chance to end this historic show with some dignity.

BOOKS/FAMILY

My wife’s book is up on Amazon for Print and digital download on Kindle and or Kindle App. The book is called:

towers-alchemist-cover.jpg

Here’s what it’s about:

On her last spy job for the Allies, the wizard Isabella George (codenamed Emelie) must extract a deadly warlock from Nazi occupied France to prevent his alchemical weapon from devouring the continent.

However, a few things stand in her way– betrayal, a vampiric Cruenti warlock bent on draining her powers…and the realization that wizards of the Gray Tower, the very people who trained her, may in fact be her greatest enemy.

I really like what she did here.  Here’s how this novel came to be:

I was going home from work when I started thinking about Role Playing games. I had tried, unsuccessfully, to get a play-by-email role playing game going with a few people.  They were unsuccessful, for the most part, because I promised people a fun time and then just gave them homework to do, which is not fun.  I’d pitch the person how easy and fun the game would be, and how little time it would take to play, only to then throw them in the middle of character creation and world building (which is a lot of work and not fun for many people).

So then I thought, my sister might like to play a game, but having learned my lesson, I wanted to offer her the fun I’d offered others WITHOUT the work.  The world building would be done, the character creation would be done and most importantly, the world was catered, inspired, and created for her. I thought long and hard, trying to come up with an original idea that would have the same fantasy elements that she seemed to like (Harry Potter) but which would be as fun and adult as other urban fantasy settings (Jim Butcher‘s Harry Dresden stories).  So I started thinking,  and I thought about the Dresden books and thought they were cool and fun and they had a wizard in it.

Well, how about if Harry (Dresden not Potter) was a woman? Since my sister is a woman, it would be more comfortable to play one. Well, that didn’t really make things interesting enough. At least, not for me, since I was going to have to develop it. I thought how, when my sister was younger, she really liked spies, so what if the wizard was a spy?  That DID make it more interesting but I still though it needed something else. What WOULD make it really interesting for me is if it took place in World War II fighting occult Nazis. Then it’s would have a lot of flavor and it would be fun to play.

Having had that idea, I started trying to come up with a scenario to have my sister play through with this concept. It ended up being too much work for me at the time just for a game, so I thought it would be better to put it off for a while.  I never even pitched my sister the idea.

A month or two later I was driving home thinking about stories. This time around, I thought,

“Boy, vampire romances are all the rage right now, even though they’ve been around forever. I wonder what the next big thing will be…Wizard romances?”

That’s when I remembered that wizard thing I had come up with for my sister. What if there was a big underling romantic arch in the story about this female, Wizard, Spy?  THAT might be appealing.  The more I thought about it, the more I liked it.  Later that day or perhaps a few days after, I told Alesha, that perhaps “Wizard Romance” novels would be the next big rage and pitched her the concept of a World War II female spy, that happened to be a Wizard.  She liked the idea so much she said she wanted to write a story about it.  Next thing I know, she’s coming up with a plot and started writing the manuscript.

I helped “edit” the book and gave her my two cents but I thought what she came up with was fantastic. The Romance elements are there too.  It’s cool.  There’s Nazi creatures and vampiric Warlock, double crossing spies, suspense, heists, magical battles and even a sword wielding magical Catholic priest.   I’m very proud of what Alesha did here.  It was really fun to see this universe come to life in a way I would have never done it and yet it still hits all the things I like in a story. Which is perhaps the best part of all.

It’s ironic that the book wouldn’t have existed if I hadn’t been doing something for my sister that I never did and she never knew I didn’t do it.

I think, next week I’ll start posting up excerpt from the book.  If you can’t wait till next week though, go to Amazon and click “Look Inside”. You can read the first three and a half chapters there right now. Or better yet BUY THE BOOK!

You can see what Alesha is up to on her site: http://www.aleshaescobar.com/

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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Hi, Welcome!

This blog is your window into the daily life of a Simpsons artist. See what it's like work on a hit TV show!

I update this blog once a week, on Thursdays and (sometimes) Fridays. If you don't see anything new, just check back on one of those days.

My e-mail is: luis(at)luisescobarblog(dot)com

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