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Walking Dead (Atticus Kodiak, Book 7) Mass Market Paperback – September 28, 2010
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Atticus Kodiak knows where people go to hide. That’s why he and Alena Cizkova have come to a secluded Georgian town in the former U.S.S.R. What he doesn’t know is what his friend and neighbor Bakhar Lagidze was hiding from. Bakhar and his entire family have been viciously murdered—all except for Lagidze’s fourteen-year-old daughter, whose nightmare is just beginning. To rescue her, Atticus must enter a lethal web that stretches from Russia to Istanbul, from Dubai to Las Vegas, and into the very heart of evil. But what troubles Atticus the most is that Alena, once one of the world’s most fearless assassins, is clearly terrified of what Atticus will uncover—and what he’ll become when he does.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBantam
- Publication dateSeptember 28, 2010
- Dimensions4.17 x 1.09 x 6.86 inches
- ISBN-100553589008
- ISBN-13978-0553589009
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A fine installment in a terrific series. Rucka has created a classic character: we are emotionally invested in Atticus and his fate.”—Booklist
“Rucka's adrenaline-filled seventh novel to feature ex-bodyguard Atticus Kodiak…[is] a nonstop thrill ride with a topical angle.”—Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
People came to Kobuleti to hide. It's why we were there, and it's why Bakhar Lagidze had brought his family there, and I knew it, and I never asked him why.
I should have.
I was awake but unsure of it, my eyes suddenly open, the last whispers of dream vanishing, leaving me with no true memory, just the impression that it had been unpleasant, that I had done things of which I was not proud. Full-moon blue filtered into the bedroom, shadows swayed behind the thin curtains as long pine boughs rocked in the breeze.
Our dog, Miata, an old Doberman with no voice, was pacing at the door. I tried to focus my blurred vision on him as he turned a circle in place, raised a paw to scratch at the door, then glanced back my way. I fumbled my glasses off the nightstand and onto my nose, watched as he repeated the sequence. It had been the noise or the motion or both that had pulled me from sleep, and I knew the behavior for what it was, and it shifted me fully awake, and I put a hand on Alena's shoulder.
"Trouble," I said.
She murmured, refusing to surface.
"Wake up." I'd been speaking in Georgian. I switched to Russian. "Trouble."
I looked to the door in time to see Miata finish another circuit, this time to fix me with a plea in his eyes. Any other dog, I'd have thought he was fighting a weak bladder. I slipped out of bed, felt the hardwood immediately leech heat from my feet. There was a pistol in the nightstand drawer. I put the gun down long enough to pull on my jeans.
"What's going on?" Alena asked.
"Miata's got something."
She looked at me blearily, halfheartedly shook her head, as if unsure she was dreaming this or not. "Not the alarm?"
"I'll check. Stay here."
She was readying a pistol of her own as I left the room.
The two laptops that ran our security system lived in the linen closet beside the bathroom, on the shelf above the towels. I could feel Miata's moist breath against my bare ankles as I checked each. No alerts, nothing had been tripped. Nothing on the video. Nothing in the logs. It occurred to me that Miata was now an old dog, and maybe he really did need to take a leak, nothing more.
Then he bolted away down the hall, paws clacking on the floor. I followed more slowly and caught up with him at the back door. Together we listened to the night, and whatever it was he was hearing, I wasn't. I opened the door, and stepped out after him into the summer darkness.
The air was close to cold, chilled as it came in off the Black Sea, with threads of thin fog hanging in the trees, and it was as dead silent outside the house as it had been within. I thought about going back for a shirt, but Miata had begun cautiously trotting toward the woods that ringed our house, muzzle and ears both raised, and he clearly wasn't in a mood to wait. Two will-o'-the-wisps, dim halos, blinked at me as a car came along the road that cut through the forest in the distance. The sound of the engine followed a second later, but barely, the vehicle easily half a mile away, turning along the road that led to the Lagidze home. The light, then the sound, faded.
I followed Miata to the edge of the treeline, where it bordered our backyard, put a hand on his back to calm him. Alena and I had cut down several of the trees in the past two years to clear sight lines to the perimeter, and we still had four cords of wood split and stacked and ready to keep us warm through the coming winter.
Then I heard the shots.
This time, Miata had to follow me.
Flat run, barefoot, in the forest, in the dark, it took me almost three minutes to cover the distance, and I counted gunshots as I ran. I heard a total of fourteen more, all of them sounding as if spoken by the same weapon. An engine turned as I reached the edge of the dirt road leading to Bakhar's house, and the car it belonged to was already in gear and accelerating, and the lights hit me. The driver's response to seeing me, shirtless, barefoot, and armed, was to floor the Land Cruiser and swerve it in my direction.
My answer was to get the hell out of the way as fast as I could, and when I got to my feet again, the car had already shot around the bend, taillights retreating. Miata burst out of the woods, racing in the direction of the house. I went after him. A second Land Cruiser was parked outside of the darkened house, its tail to Bakhar's beat-up Opel, and I could see three men heading for the larger vehicle. The night stole details, but I saw that two of them were armed, and one of them had a long gun, the distinctive silhouette of an AK, and maybe Miata didn't care, but I sure as hell did.
"Back!" I shouted the command in Russian, and Miata took it immediately, veering off sharply, into the cover of the woods on the right.
I went left, and had just enough time to put a tree between myself and the AK before the shots came. Whoever was on the trigger knew his business and controlled his bursts, sending three my way in short order. The Land Cruiser started up right after the third salvo. I broke cover to run alongside the road, using the trees, and the AK shouted at me again, and this time I got a fix on the shooter and returned fire, two double-taps that went true.
A door slammed, and the Land Cruiser shot forward, then past, then was gone.
I brought my pistol down, tried to get my heart rate and breathing to follow suit. Miata edged out of the shadows on the other side of the road, followed me as I went to check on the man I'd shot. His legs had folded beneath him where he'd collapsed, the AK lying parallel to his knees. I could see he was Caucasian, probably Eastern European, which was hardly a surprise, considering that was where we were. I found a wallet and a wad of euros on him and took both, stuffing them into my own pockets. I picked up the AK, gave it a quick check.
The night had gone quiet again.
I looked toward my friend's house. The front door was ajar, perforated with shots. Moonlight dropped a shadow that filled the entrance with darkness.
"Bakhar?"
I didn't get an answer. I didn't expect one.
I already knew what I was going to find.
Chapter Two
The first thing Bakhar Lagidze had said to me was, "You run like someone is chasing you."
Then he laughed.
This wasn't the first time I'd seen him, but it was the first time we'd exchanged words. He, his wife, daughter, and young son had moved into the neighboring house the previous spring, and in the interest of exercising due diligence, Alena and I had taken discreet notice. It wasn't that neighbors were a danger, per se, but any change in the status quo, by necessity, had to be viewed as a potential threat. Theoretically, we were as safe now as we were ever likely to be, living under carefully established cover that we had each come to embrace. But theory and practice continue to be two different things, and there were people who knew what we had done, and what we could do, and who, despite their promises to the contrary, might one day decide not to leave well enough alone.
So we had made it our business to know who these new neighbors were, if only to be certain that they posed no threat to us.
It would have been easy for me to have ignored him, then, to have pretended to be too absorbed in my run to have heard him. But we'd passed one another on this road before, me running back up from Kobuleti's one main street, heading home, him walking with his fishing pole and tackle box down to the beach. It wasn't simply that it would've been rude; better to be known and accepted in the community, to belong, and thus turn the community itself into another layer of security.
So I slowed, then stopped, then turned back to face him, maybe twenty feet between us. He was watching me, head cocked to the side, the edges of a smile visible beneath his thick mustache.
"You're always going so fast," he said. "Every time I see you. Sprinting."
"Tail end of the run," I explained. "Last push."
He nodded, then used the fishing pole to gesture up the road, at the woods. "You and your wife, you're in the little house, right?"
I crossed the road closer to where he stood, nodding. It was easier than using words, and I was somewhat breathless, and it gave me a few more seconds to think things through. Alena took her run in the afternoon, preferring to leave it before dinner, and it was as likely as not that he'd seen her taking the same route I did.
He used the pole again, this time to gesture in the direction of his home. "We're in the Party house, the old Russian's place. Fucking Russians, we had to tear out half of everything just to make it into a home."
"Yeah, we're always working on our place," I said.
He nodded, commiserating with a lifetime commitment to home improvement, then set down his pole so it leaned against his side and offered me his hand. "Bakhar. Bakhar Lagidze."
"David," I lied. "David Mercer."
We shook hands.
"American?"
"Canadian," I lied, again. "You're local?"
"Born in Tbilisi. You speak our language very well."
"My wife taught me."
"She's Georgian, too?"
I nodded. The lies were so practiced they didn't require any thought on my part. "But she grew up in Moscow. She used to dance."
Bakhar Lagidze's eyes lit up. They were blue, deep set in his lined face. His mustache, mostly black, had strays of gray emerging. I put him in his early forties, maybe five years older than I was.
"She should meet Tiasa! She's my daughter, she wants to dance, like the Bolshoi. Your wife teaches, right?"
"A little," I admitted. Alena had begun taking on students, only a handful of them, since we'd last returned from the U.S. She'd posted flyers in the cafes in town, initially as a means of reinforcing our cover, establishing a meager supplemental income that we didn't really need. It was my suspicion that she enjoyed teaching, though she had yet to admit as much to me. "You should bring her by."
"Maybe Ia will bring her over."
"Ia?"
"My wife." Bakhar's smiled broadened, showing stained teeth and genuine pleasure. "Wonderful to meet you, David. Nice to meet the neighbors."
"Good to meet you, too," I told him.
It wasn't until I was home, under the needle-spray of the shower, that it occurred to me that Bakhar Lagidze had most likely done to us what we had done to him. He'd checked us out, just enough to be sure his neighbors didn't pose him a threat.
He'd been right.
The threat had come from another source entirely.
I stepped in blood when I stepped into the house. There was a lot of it, and I could smell it, along with the lingering of gunpowder. The moonlight outside wasn't enough. I was going to have to turn on a light.
When it came on, I could see the puddle, spent brass glittering in and around it. The blood broke into a smear, leading down the hall. Like our home, Bakhar's was only one-story. Unlike ours, it was large, as befitted a family of four. On entry, the hall opened to a common room that doubled for dining, and then, off that, was the kitchen. Following the hall led to the master bedroom, and then the corridor went ninety degrees to the left, to the bathroom and the two other bedrooms.
Miata snuffed at the air behind me, hesitating.
"Home," I told him, and pointed the way. He looked at me sorrowfully, then dropped his head and went.
The smear ran straight to the master bedroom, its door wide open. I tried to be careful where I stepped as I followed the trail down the hall. My blood-covered soles dried on the carpet, and for a second I thought they might be a problem later, but then I thought about the general state of law enforcement in Georgia in general, and Kobuleti in particular, and admitted that I was most likely worrying about nothing. Forensic science hadn't ever been high on the national agenda, and since the war in South Ossetia and the subsequent Russian stranglehold on the country, it had fallen even further.
A table lamp had fallen in the bedroom, its light still on, and it illuminated from below. Somehow it made the scene inside the more horrible.
The blood had been Bakhar's, but I'd already guessed that, and maybe that was why I thought I'd find less of it in here. I was wrong. There was more.
There was a lot more.
He'd been shot in the hall, through the front door, perhaps as he'd come to answer it. I hadn't seen a gun anywhere on the floor and I wasn't seeing one in the bedroom, so if he'd been expecting trouble and had come to answer it with some of his own, the men who'd killed him had taken the weapon. They'd hit Bakhar in the chest, perhaps as many as four times from what I could see. Then they'd entered and taken hold of him, likely by his hair, and dragged him to the master bedroom, where they'd propped him on his bed.
At that point they'd gone to work on him with a knife.
He was still recognizable to me, but barely. Stabs and slashes covered his face, chest, and groin, though I couldn't see any on his arms or hands, nothing that resembled a defensive wound. It would have been nice to believe that meant he'd already died before they brought out the blade, that he hadn't tried to defend himself because there'd been nothing left of him to defend. But it was just as likely that he'd been dying instead of dead, and from the two Land Cruisers I knew there had been at least four of them who had come for the killing, and certainly two could've held his arms while a third set to carving.
The knife had been entirely unnecessary, and the savagery of it spoke clearly of cruelty and rage. His neck had been cut so badly it seemed now barely able to keep his head with his body. Blood, brain, and flecks of bone glistened in the macabre light. I could see the pearl gray of his cervical vertebrae in the mass of red meat that had been his throat.
This wasn't simply murder.
This was looking at hatred, pure and plain.
Product details
- Publisher : Bantam; Reissue edition (September 28, 2010)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0553589008
- ISBN-13 : 978-0553589009
- Item Weight : 7 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.17 x 1.09 x 6.86 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #320,108 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,265 in International Mystery & Crime (Books)
- #18,267 in American Literature (Books)
- #22,004 in Suspense Thrillers
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Greg Rucka is an award-winning author of comics, novels, and screenplays, including 2020’s The Old Guard, starring Charlize Theron. He is the author of some two-dozen novels, including the Atticus Kodiak series (Keeper, Finder, Smoker, Shooting at Midnight, Patriot Acts, and Walking Dead) as well as the Queen & Country series (A Gentelman’s Game, Private Wars, and The Last Run) which expands upon his Eisner-winning series of the same name, published by Oni Press.
He is the co-creator of the series Lazarus (with Michael Lark,) and Black Magick (with Nicola Scott) as well as The Old Guard stories with co-creator Leandro Fernandez. He is a multiple GLAAD, Eisner, and Harvey Award winner. His writing has included stories for both Marvel and DC, as well as penning three "middle-reader" Star Wars novellas.
Rucka was born in San Francisco and raised on the Monterey Peninsula. He earned his A.B. in English from Vassar College, and his MFA from USC. His first novel was published when he was 24, his first comic book series — Whiteout, from Oni Press — some five years later. He is married to writer Jennifer Van Meter. They have two children and one dog.
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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It was the topic that gave me pause, sex trafficking and slavery. I have a teenage daughter and as much as I wanted to know what Atticus was up to, I just couldn't bring myself to read a novel about this horrific business. So, I put it on the shelf and left it there for the past year and a half.
Rucka has since published his latest Queen & Country novel, which I loved, so I decided last week to pick up Walking Dead and attempt to read it. I'm so glad I did. If you know Atticus, he is a very complicated character and has always operated in the grey, between the line that separates good and bad. I knew going into this that it would be impossible to put down and it would be constant adrenaline from the first chapter on and that was definitely the case. I also knew Rucka's character's aren't super heroes (ok, some literally are, but not in this series), so there was a chance that the good guys would die and the ending would be tough. It was with this knowledge that I picked up the novel, not knowing where this ride would go.
What I found was one of his best Atticus Kodiak books to date. The book begins with Atticus and his ex-Soviet assassin girlfriend, Alena Cizhova, living in a Georgian town in the former USSR. Laying low and establishing a new life was all they wanted and they were well on their way to living a life of anonymity and peace, until their neighbor's are brutally murdered and their daughter, Tiasa, is kidnapped. Atticus and Alena probably should just let it go, but they are unable to do that and what follows is a pursuit into the dark work of sex kidnapping and slavery around the world - from Georgia, to Turkey, to Dubai and finally to Las Vegas.
Despite my fears, Rucka handled the topic with a lot of sensitivity and there was nothing graphic in regards to the subject he was bringing awareness to. What was at times graphic was the vigilante justice displayed by Atticus. If you're at all familiar with this all too real horrible business you will wish there were a thousand Atticus' out there, as this is a worldwide problem that is destroying millions of lives.
With Rucka you never know what he's going to do and until I closed the book I was nervous. I won't give away the ending, but I will tell you that justice for Tiasa is finally done and the novel ends with her in a place where she can heal. I came away glad I had finally read the book and satisfied with the justice dispensed for the truly evil characters who came between Atticus and an innocent child. I also set the novel down with an acute awareness that something has to be done. Whether you live in Portland or Las Vegas, the United States or Georgia, sex trafficking is a real issue that needs to be addressed and that needs more public awareness. I hope that those who read this book will take a second to think about what they can do to raise awareness of this modern day slavery. And let's hope for more Atticus who are willing to put their life on the line to stop this injustice.
OPD did a great job spotlighting the issue on the air - I believe you can download the show here - [...]
Tiasa is quickly pumped into the pipeline of human sex traffickers and Atticus has the formidable task of following a cold trail to locate Tiasa while becoming a major target for every evil or twisted killer or pervert he encounters along the way. His single minded efforts to find the girl and to punish anyone who gets in his way ultimately brings grave repercussions to his beloved wife Alena and his home in the Republic of Georgia. Bridgette Logan makes an unexpected appearance and provides some needed humor when she and Alena team up for a time.
His search takes Atticus from the Georgian Republic to Turkey to Dubai to New York, Las Vegas and finally Ireland. Never has Atticus been so focused, so deadly, so unforgiving, yet never has he shown his humanity and compassion as much as he does in "Walking Dead." Make no mistake that this novel is as much about Atticus finding and reaffirming his core values as it is about him finding and rescuing a kidnapped girl.
Rucka presents a tightly plotted, edge-of-the-seat thriller that will have the reader gasping for air at times. Never has Atticus been this deadly or this vulnerable. And the depiction of one of the sickest aspects of humanity, the trafficking of young girls in the sex markets of the world, is enough to make one nauseous. Having read all five novels in the series, this reader easily rates this as the finest and it is enough of a stand alone that new readers can enjoy it without knowing all the back-story. I heartily recommend to all who enjoy fast paced, danger-laden suspense thrillers.
It is a page turner and a thrill ride. Atticus Kodiak is one of the most complex, interesting, heartbreaking and ultimately decent characters in American thrillers for a long time.
The reader goes with him on a journey to find out what kind of person Kodiak has become. In the previous novel, Patriot Acts, for reasons of revenge and self preservation, he had crossed lines that he had never even been close to before. There is no going back after that, but there are still the broken pieces of his old self to fit together. Has he gone to far to ever believe he could be a decent human being again?
This story addresses that question squarely as he seeks to be the salvation of just one girl who has been swallowed by the horror of the international human sex trafficking industry. His travels take him through the Caucases, Anatolia, the Middle East, Europe and North America. He is tested physically, mentally and spiritually, trying to forge a new path for himself, and do the one thing he knows is right, no matter the cost.
This is a thriller with a conscience, an adventure with a lesson, and an unforgettable thrill ride. Rucka is in top form. The writing is tight, the characterization crisp and the action is brutal.
Read this book!
Top reviews from other countries

I have now read my way, in order, through the entire sequence, and to my mind it is one of the best in the series. If you have not read any of the other titles, then you would nevertheless enjoy this one as a standalone title. The plot is straightforward and pleasantly direct, Atticus and Alena are hiding out in Russia, a neighbouring family are slaughtered with the daughter being kidnapped. It becomes apparent that she has fallen victim to sex traffickers specialising in underage girls. Atticus sets out to retrieve her, once again earning the 'boy scout' epithet that was previously applied to him.
The morality is straightforward, these are bad people, and Atticus is keeping bad company and walking a dangerous path in tracking down the missing daughter.
I think the book really benefits from being about something, Rucka put a fair bit of research into the book, and it comes across as a convincing read. This is a difficult and unpleasant subject, that has been used responsibly for a thought provoking thriller.
There is final action sequence that felt a bit contrived, but overall this is exciting, enjoyable thriller about the real evil that exists in the world.
