Frye family

The Frye family was an British ennobled family who had an important role in the British Brotherhood of Assassins for the Liberation of London from the British Rite of the Templar Order.

Protectors of Crawley
The roots of the Frye family took place in Crawley, a city in the south of England where the British Assassins installed after losing the control of London during the mid-18th century. At the dawn of the 19th century, the schoolmaster Ethan Frye became an Assassin and married another member of the Brotherhood, Cecily. Working together, they became high ranking Assassins and recruited George Westhouse, a mill worker in Crawley.

In 1841, Ethan went in India to protect the Koh-i-Noor, a Piece of Eden created by the Isu. In Amritsar, he met the Indian Assassin Arbaaz Mir and they became close friends. In 1847, Cecily gave birth to twins, Evie and Jacob but Cecily died of complications shortly thereafter. Depressed, Ethan couldn't raise his children who indirectly caused the death of his wife. He gave his twins to Cecily's mother and went to India to traine Jayadeep Mir, the son of Arbaaz and Pyara Kaur. Even if the young Assassin was talented, Ethan knew that Jayadeep lacked of killer instinct. But as a mentor-pupil bond developped between the two, Jayadeep convinced Ethan to return in England to raise his children.