Ethan Frye
Ethan Frye (c. 1825 – 1868) was a schoolmaster and a Master Assassin of the British Brotherhood during the Victorian era. He was the husband of Cecily Frye and the father of twins Jacob and Evie Frye, as well as the great-grandfather of Jacob's granddaughter Lydia Frye. Through Evie, he is an ancestor to the 21st century Assassin scientist Jackie O'Connell.[2]
A close friend of the Indian Assassin Arbaaz Mir, Ethan was tasked with hiding the Koh-i-Noor following its retrieval by Arbaaz. He also agreed to oversee the training of Arbaaz's son, Jayadeep Mir, shortly after the death of his wife and the birth of his own children. Ethan grew close to his student and saved his life when Jayadeep was sentenced to death after a botched mission by convincing the Indian Brotherhood to exile him to London.
While training his children in the Assassins' ways, Ethan and his allies sought to liberate London from the Templars' control. Though Ethan died of pleurisy before he could succeed, his mission would ultimately be accomplished by Jacob, Evie and Jayadeep.
Biography
Early life
Inducted into the British Brotherhood of Assassins in his teenage years,[1] Ethan operated in Crawley, a town south of London, where he also worked as a schoolmaster.[3] In 1841, he traveled to Amritsar in the Sikh Empire and met the Indian Assassin Arbaaz Mir, who entrusted him the Koh-i-Noor, one of the Pieces of Eden sought by their enemies, the Templars. The two Assassins became good friends in the process.[4]
Returning to England after hiding the Koh-i-Noor, Ethan married the Welsh woman Cecily, who later joined the Brotherhood. Their partnership became renowned for its efficiency.[5] At some point, Ethan saved the mill worker George Westhouse from a gang of robbers and subsequently inducted him into the Brotherhood, acting as his mentor alongside Cecily. The three ran various missions together and, in time, Ethan and George became close friends.[6]
By 1847, Cecily was pregnant and eventually gave birth to her and Ethan's twins, Evie and Jacob, on 9 November, but died from complications shortly thereafter. Broken by his wife's death and blaming the newborn twins for his loss, a distraught Ethan accepted his mother-in-law's offer to raise his children until the age of six.[7] In the meantime, Ethan returned to India to take up the training of Arbaaz's son, Jayadeep Mir.[1]
Assassin teacher
- "What we are doing is right... My doubt, dear Arbaaz, lies in the application of that ideology, and this doubt is what keeps me awake at night, wondering if we fail our children by molding them into our image, when in fact we should be teaching them to follow a path of their own."
- ―Ethan in a letter to Arbaaz Mir, 1859.[src]
Teaching the boy swordsmanship and theories, Ethan put Jayadeep's lessons into practice in the streets of Amritsar. Despite Ethan's harsh and gruff manner, the two eventually developed a mentor-pupil bond. On one occassion, during a stealth lesson, he ordered Jayadeep to return with information gained from eavesdropping. The student returned to his mentor with a gossip about his past, which Ethan admitted was true before telling Jayadeep that their friendship had awakened a parental instinct inside him.[1]
Ethan eventually transitioned Jayadeep's training from wooden swords to steel ones and discovered that the talented Jayadeep had a weakness for violence. He told this to the boy's parents, much to Arbaaz's anger and Pyara Kaur's sadness. Nevertheless, Ethan left for England in 1853 after his time with Jayadeep had made him decide to properly take care of his children and mourn his wife's passing.[1] He raised Evie and Jacob in the philosophy of the Creed, advising them to learn patience[8] and to never let personal feelings get in the way of the mission.[5] He also instilled in them a sense of social duty, teaching them to help the people achieve freedom rather than simply eliminating oppressors. Evie took his words to heart,[7] whereas Jacob merely wanted to drown them out.[3]
Six years after his departure from India, Ethan received word that Jayadeep would embark on his first assassination mission. Worried for the boy, he wrote a letter to Arbaaz in which he expressed his belief that they should let their children find their own path instead of instilling in them their own philosophies. However, Arbaaz refused his request to delay Jayadeep's mission.[1]
Ethan later learned that Jayadeep had failed his mission and, as punishment, was being held prisoner at the Assassin base known as the Darkness, awaiting execution. Concerned for his student, he immediately traveled to Amritsar and interrogated Jayadeep, confirming his suspicion that the reason for his student's failure was his weakness for violence. Ethan then went to Arbaaz and pleaded with him to spare his own son's life by banishing him to London under the alias "The Ghost". Arbaaz agreed and thanked his friend. Ethan then sent Jayadeep to London, with money and a new name: Bharat Singh.[1]
Working with the Ghost
When Jayadeep arrived in London, Ethan gave him documents about active Templars in the country and told him to blend in with the poor. Jayadeep was to work undercover in the underground railway construction to spy upon the Templars there.[1] In 1861, Ethan met with the Assassin Simeon Price and his apprentice Pierrette Arnaud, who sought information on the Irish Assassin Oscar Kane. However, Ethan had never heard of him, but told them to find "The Ghost," who might be able to help them.[9]
The following year, Ethan tracked down the thief Boot, who worked as a courier for the British Templars. Threatening him with his Hidden Blade, the Assassin interrogated Boot to uncover the identity of his boss. However, before the man could answer, he was shot by an unidentified individual, who also accidentally killed an innocent girl while aiming for Ethan. Angered by the death of an innocent, the Assassin chased and eliminated the man, who turned out to be Boot's employer Robert Waugh, without further questioning him.[1]
Returning to George's home in Croydon, Ethan lied to his friend about the circumstances of his assassination of Waugh as the Assassins planned their next move. Ethan then tasked Jayadeep to dispose of Waugh's body at a railway site which was being used by the Templar Cavanagh to search for a Piece of Eden. This was part of the Assassins' plan to have Jayadeep ingratiate himself with Cavanagh and infiltrate his inner circle in order to gather more intel.[1]
Jayadeep was ultimately successful in his task, though unbeknownst to the Assassins, Cavanagh began to suspect Jayadeep's true identity and affiliations and had the Indian Assassin Ajay captured for interrogation. After Ajay told the Templars everything he knew to save himself, putting Jayadeep's life in danger, he traveled to Crawley to warn Ethan about the situation. Arriving at the Frye household, Ajay handed Evie a cryptic letter and immediately left.[1]
Sensing something was amiss, Ethan decided to pursue Ajay, eventually ambushing him alongside Evie, Jacob and George. Cornered and wracked with guilt, Ajay apologized to Ethan before taking his own life. Now aware of the danger Jayadeep was in, Ethan discussed the situation with George before traveling to London to save his pupil, who had been ordered by Cavanagh to kill the solicitor Charles Pearson during the inauguration of the railway.[1]
Confronting Cavanagh
Blending in with the crowd, Ethan searched for Jayadeep and Cavanagh and managed to locate them, but was attacked by several of the Templar's henchmen who recognized him as an Assassin. Fortunately, the police officer Frederick Abberline came to his rescue and helped Ethan defeat his assailants, with the Assassin personally slaying the Templar thug Hardy. He then made his way into the railway tunnel, where Cavanagh had fled with the Apple of Eden taken from Pearson after killing him.[1]
Despite the Templar using the Apple's powers against them, Ethan and Jayadeep were able to escape to safety as the tunnel around them collapses, trapping Cavanagh, who was subsequently killed by the Templar Marchant for plotting against Grand Master Crawford Starrick. Meanwhile, Ethan consoled Jayadeep about his failure to secure the Apple and confessed that their mission had not been sanctioned by the Brotherhood. Jaydeep then left as he realized that the compromise of his identity had endangered his friends.[1]
After Jayadeep discovered that the Templars had killed one of his friends, Maggie, he fell into a deep depression and decided to end his career as an Assassin, living in isolation in the Thames Tunnel. Both Ethan and George failed to reach out to him and it would not be until 1865, when Jayadeep received a visit from his parents, that the young man was inspired to take up work as an Assassin once again, resuming his partnership with Ethan.[1]
Death and legacy
In January 1868, Ethan died of pleurisy in his home in Crawley, with George by his bedside. Before passing away, Ethan discussed the future of the Brotherhood with George and trusted him to continue his children's training.[1] However, Jacob and Evie both considered they were ready to take on the Templars in London. Despite Geroge's efforts to dissuade their ambitions, claiming that it was not what Ethan would have wanted for them, the twins ultimately disobeyed him and embarked on a secret mission to liberate the city from the Templars' control.[8]
During their time in London, Jacob and Evie received help from Jayadeep, for whom Evie soon developed romantic feelings, which came into conflict with Ethan's teachings about letting emotions compromise their missions. As Evie wished to uphold her father's legacy, she initially hesitated to pursue a relationship with Jayadeep, making her the target of frequent mockery from Jacob.[10]
The twins often times argued over Ethan's lessons, because unlike his sister, Jacob loathed them and believed that he finally had the opportunity to prove himself to the Brotherhood without his father holding him back.[3] In time, however, Jacob discovered that there was some truth to Ethan's words and that the absence of self-control led to chaos, which Jacob experienced first-hand, causing him to become less reckless with his actions.[11]
Meanwhile, Evie learned from Jayadeep's great-uncle, Maharaja Duleep Singh, about the history of her parents and how much Cecily's death had affected Ethan. After Singh warned her that pain can blind people and make them say outlandish things to protect their loved ones,[5] Evie concluded that her father had not been right about everything and decided to rely on her own beliefs moving forward.[12]
Personality and traits
- "I'm thirty-seven years of age, and I've seen more than my fair share of kills, and I know that notions of justice, equity and retribution play a second to skill, and skill is subordinate to luck. When fortune turns her face to you. When the killer's bullet goes elsewhere, when he drops his guard, you take your chance, before she turns away again."
- ―Ethan defending himself to George Westhouse, 1862.[src]
Ethan delighted in courting with danger and was unafraid of accidents that the Hidden Blade may cause. He had a sense of justice especially for the innocents and once assassinated a target because it accidentally killed a young girl. He was a strong follower of the Creed and believed that the Assassins' philosophy was right. Nevertheless, he doubted the application of these philosophies to his own children and chose to teach Evie and Jacob to make their own path rather than model them into an image of himself. He also believed in every Assassins' individuality and that by embracing their uniqueness, they would become a huge asset to the Brotherhood.[1]
Following his wife's death, Ethan was heartbroken and initially blamed his newborn children for the loss before deciding to distract himself from his mourning by training Jayadeep. Mentoring the young Assassin awakened a paternal instict inside Ethan and he decided to use the lessons learned from training Jayadeep to raise his own children. Despite this, he continued to have a fatherly relationship with Jayadeep.[1]
By contrast, Ethan was relatively cold and distant to Evie and Jacob, which was likely done on purpose as one of the principal lessons he taught them was to never allow personal feelings to compromise their missions.[10] However, both Evie and Duleep Singh later came to the conclusion that this outlook on life was flawed and born from the suffering Ethan had experienced after his wife's death.[5]
Skills and equipment
As a trained Assassin, Ethan was a skilled freerunner and a master of stealth. He was also talented in spying and interrogation. In addition to a Hidden Blade, he wielded a Pall Mall Colt revolver.[1]
Behind the scenes
The name Ethan (איתן) is of Hebrew origin, meaning "firm", "strong" or "impetuous". It may also be a reference to Aethon, Zeus' eagle that ate at Prometheus' insides,[13] which would fit with the Assassins' frequent avian theme. Frye is a derivative of the English word free.
His original name might have been intended to be Emmett Frye due to it appearing on a list of known British Assassins in Isabelle Ardant's office.[14]
Appearances
- Assassin's Creed: Underworld (first appearance)
- Assassin's Creed: Syndicate (mentioned only)
- Jack the Ripper (mentioned in Database entry only) (indirect mention only)
- Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India
- Assassin's Creed: Rebellion (mentioned in Database entry only) (indirect mention only)
- Assassin's Creed: The Engine of History – The Magus Conspiracy
- Assassin's Creed: The Engine of History – The Resurrection Plot (mentioned only)
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 Assassin's Creed: Underworld
- ↑ Assassin's Creed Roleplaying Game – Animus Training Program Quickstart: Character File Folios
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Database: Jacob Frye
- ↑ Assassin's Creed Chronicles: India – The Rescue
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Family Politics
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Database: George Westhouse
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Database: Evie Frye
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – A Simple Plan
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: The Engine of History – The Magus Conspiracy – Chapter 19
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – A Room with a View
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Fun and Games
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – A Night to Remember
- ↑
Aethon on Wikipedia
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Syndicate – Modern day
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