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Garrison's Finish : a romance of the race course by William Blair Morton Ferguson
page 115 of 173 (66%)
your jackal. That's your friendship, but I say if that's friendship,
Crimmins, then to the devil with it, and may God send me hatred
instead!" He choked with the sheer smother of his passion.

Crimmins was breathing heavily. Then passion marked him for the thing
he was. Garrison saw confronting him not the unctuous, plausible friend,
but a hunted animal, with fear and venom showing in his narrowed eyes.
And, curiously enough, he noticed for the first time that the prison
pallor was strong on Crimmins' face, and that the hair above his
outstanding ears was clipped to the roots.

Then Crimmins spoke; through his teeth, and very slowly: "So you'll
go to Waterbury, eh?" And he nodded the words home. "You--little cur,
you--you little misbegotten bottle of bile! What are you and your
hypocrisies to me? You don't know me, you don't know me." He laughed,
and Garrison felt repulsion fingering his heart. Then the former trainer
shot out a clawing, ravenous hand. "I want that money--want it quick!"
he spat, taking a step forward. "You want hatred, eh? Well, hatred
you'll have, boy. Hatred that I've always given you, you miserable,
puling, lily-livered spawn of a--"

Garrison blotted out the insult to his mother's memory with his
knuckles. "And that's for your friendship," he said, smashing home a
right cross.

Crimmins arose very slowly from the white road, and even thought of
flicking some of the fine dust from his coat. He was smiling. The moon
was very bright. Crimmins glanced up and down the deserted pike. From
the distant town a bell chimed the hour of eight. He had twenty pounds
the better of the weights, but he was taking no chances. For Garrison,
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