This story starts after the Cold War. A man named D.F. Rosévet, who was a Soviet military officer, was the one who started everything. After the Cold War, the Soviet military unit called the RSH-6 was disbanded, so D.F. Rosévet went to Venezuela and started a new family there. He had a wife and became a successful businessman. He even became one of the founders of the 13 Family Order, called the High-13—better known as the HV13. But all those 13 families were just a facade. Their fame and luxury were merely a cover for the world. Inside, they had dirty business among the 13. Only Rosévet didn't engage in any dirty dealings, but he made an organization of his own called the RBH (Rosévet's Bloodhounds).
It's 1997. Rosévet's first unit ever created in the Bloodhounds was assigned a job in Afghanistan: to eliminate a terrorist organization. Rosévet personally led the mission. After three days of hellish fighting, the RBH finally succeeded in their mission—but Rosévet lost one of his arms due to a heavy explosion. Yet fate helped four people that night: Rosévet and the three children he found in Afghanistan. All three of them were aged about 3–4 years old. Rosévet couldn't leave them, so he took them with him and decided to raise them as his own family.
At that time, Rosévet already had a daughter named Lilly—the next great head of the family and the next general of the RBH. Rosévet named the two boys Lucas and Ric, and the girl Maria.