Hapti

Hapti (died 47 BCE) was an Egyptian honey farmer who was engaged to Merope, and had conceived a child with her, before ending up as a worker in the Roman Quarry Camp in the Green Mountains region of Cyrenaica during the mid-1st century BCE.

Biography
Sometime prior to 47 BCE, Hapti proposed to Merope, and they agreed to marry. Before that could happen, though, they conceived a child and Hapti ended up as a worker in the Roman Quarry Camp.

Hapti had an image of the Ankh tattooed onto his skin, believing it to be a remembrance of Egypt, and a protective amulet. He also wrought a bracelet for Merope.

At some point in 47 BCE, a fellow worker, Seker, roused some of the workers, and they plotted a revolt against the Romans in charge of the quarry. Hapti tried to dissuade Seker and his followers, but failed. Fearing for the worst, Hapti wrote a letter to Merope, and gave it to a messenger.

The messenger, however, was caught and tortured by bandits of a nearby hideout. Exploring the hideout, the Medjay Bayek of Siwa found Hapti's letter, and decided to find the man who had written it.

Coming upon the quarry, Bayek found corpses littering the ground: the Romans had answered the attempted revolt by slaughtering all the workers, including Hapti, whom Bayek recognized by his Ankh-tattoo. However, the bracelet Hapti had mentioned in his letter wasn't on his body, but a Roman soldier had claimed it; Bayek retrieved it, and gave it to Merope, whom he found on Hapti's honey farm, southeast of the quarry.

Appearance

 * Assassin's Creed: Origins