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s of old; and something tells me that thou wilt come well out of it, but still thou wilt be sore tried." Then Njal took the award into his own hands from Gunnar, and said, "I will not push this matter to the uttermost; thou shalt pay twelve ounces of silver; but I will add this to my award, that if anything happens from our homestead about which thou hast to utter an award, thou wilt not be less easy in thy terms." Gunnar paid up the money out of hand, and rode home afterwards. Njal, too, came home from the Thing, and his sons. Bergthora saw the money, and said, "This is very justly settled; but even as much money shall be paid for Kol as time goes on." Gunnar came home from the Thing and blamed Hallgerda. She said, better men lay unatoned in many places. Gunnar said, she might have her way in beginning a quarrel, "but how the matter is to be settled rests with me." Hallgerda was for ever chattering of Swart's slaying, but Bergthora liked that ill. Once Njal and her sons went up to Thorolfsfell to see about the house-keeping there, but that selfsame day this thing happened when Bergthora was out of doors: she sees a man ride up to the house on a black horse. She stayed there and did not go in, for she did not know the man. That man had a spear in his hand, and was girded with a short sword. She asked this man his name. "Atli is my name," says he. She asked whence he came. "I am an Eastfirther," he says. "Whither shalt thou go?" she says. "I am a homeless man," says he, "and I thought to see Njal and Skarphedinn, and know if they would take me in." "What work is handiest to thee?" says she. "I am a man used to field-work," he says, "and many things else come very handy to me; but I will not hide from thee that I am a man of hard temper, and it has been many a man's lot before now to bind up wounds at my hand." "I do not blame thee," she says, "though thou art no milksop." Atli said, "Hast thou any voice in things here?" "I am Njal's wife," she says, "and I have as much to say to our housefolk as he." "Wilt thou take me in then?" says he. "I will give thee thy choice of that," says she. "If thou wilt do all the work that I set before thee, and that, though I wish to send thee where a man's life is at stake." "Thou must have so many men at thy beck," says he, "that thou wilt not need me for such work." "That I will settle as I please," she says. "We will strike a bargai
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