Assassins Creed Iv - Black Flag -europe- -enar- -

Edward returned to the Caribbean, but something had changed. He no longer sailed only for plunder. He carried a new compass—not Isu, not gold, but a simple magnetic one Arwa had given him. Its needle pointed to no treasure, only north.

Arwa performed the surgery in a candlelit cave beneath Gibraltar, Edward holding the boy’s hand. When Nasim opened his eyes, they glowed faintly blue—and he drew a perfect circle around a spot in the North Sea, east of the Orkneys.

The boy, Nasim, was the ship’s reis’ son. He could not speak, but he drew in the sand: a map of a fortress not in Ireland, not in England, but in the Pillars of Hercules—Gibraltar.

The final battle took place not on land, but in the narrows of the Strait of Gibraltar. Edward’s refitted Jackdaw —sails patched with Moorish silk, crew half-Bahamian, half-Berber—faced three Templar frigates. Assassins Creed IV - Black Flag -Europe- -EnAr-

“I don’t need forever,” Edward said. “I just need today.”

Her name was Arwa bint Malik. A hakima —physician—from Aleppo, trained by the last of the Levantine Assassins. She wore no hood, but a surgeon’s mask. Her blades were not on her wrists but in her words: poisons, cures, truth serums.

The wreck of the Sultana’s Mirror lay not far from the Aran Islands. But the sea had scattered her secrets. What Edward found instead was a survivor: a mute boy, no older than twelve, with olive skin and calloused hands, clutching a brass disc etched with constellations. Edward returned to the Caribbean, but something had changed

EnAr was real. Not a ghost, but a woman.

They fought in the rain. Ashworth was no duelist; he had a pistol hidden in his cane. But Edward had a broken bottle and a lifetime of rage. He pinned the Grand Master to the wheel.

Arwa did not smile. “They want godhood, Kenway. Dressed in a wig and a ledger.” Its needle pointed to no treasure, only north

Nasim, the mute boy, was not just a survivor—he was the living Index. His father had tattooed the coordinates onto his retinas using alchemical ink visible only under a specific wavelength of light (derived from Isu crystals). The brass disc was merely a key to unlock the vision.

“A sunken city,” Arwa whispered. “Older than Eden.”

Edward Kenway, Master Assassin of the British West Indies, was no stranger to blood. But the blood on the letter he held was not from a blade—it was from a quill. The ink, mixed with iron gall and something darker, smelled of the Levant.

Lord Ashworth did not wait. His fleet blockaded Gibraltar. He offered terms: give him the boy, and he would spare the Assassins. “The Templars will usher in an age of peace through control,” his letter read. “You pirates only know chaos.”

“The Observatory,” Ashworth gasped. “You’ll never… protect it forever.”