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ed the scarf, and asked, "Who may have given this?" and laughed, but no man answered him. Then Flosi said, "How is it that none of you knows who has owned this gear, or is it that none dares to tell me?" "Who?" said Skarphedinn, "dost thou think, has given it?" "If thou must know," said Flosi, "then I will tell thee; I think that thy father the `Beardless Carle' must have given it, for many know not who look at him whether he is more a man than a woman." "Such words are ill-spoken," said Skarphedinn, "to make game of him, an old man, and no man of any worth has ever done so before. Ye may know, too, that he is a man, for he has had sons by his wife, and few of our kinsfolk have fallen unatoned by our house, so that we have not had vengeance for them." Then Skarphedinn took to himself the silken scarf, but threw a pair of blue breeks to Flosi, and said he would need them more. "Why," said Flosi, "should I need these more?" "Because," said Skarphedinn, "thou art the sweetheart of the Swinefell's goblin, if, as men say, he does indeed turn thee into a woman every ninth night." Then Flosi spurned the money, and said he would not touch a penny of it, and then he said he would only have one of two things: either that Hauskuld should fall unatoned, or they would have vengeance for him. Then Flosi would neither give nor take peace, and he said to the sons of Sigfus, "Go we now home; one fate shall befall us all." Then they went home to their booth, and Hall said, "Here most unlucky men have a share in this suit." Njal and his sons went home to their booth, and Njal said, "Now comes to pass what my heart told me long ago, that this suit would fall heavy on us." "Not so," says Skarphedinn; "they can never pursue us by the laws of the land." "Then that will happen," says Njal, "which will be worse for all of us." Those men who had given the money spoke about it, and said that they should take it back; but Gudmund the Powerful said, "That shame I will never choose for myself, to take back what I have given away, either here or elsewhere." "That is well spoken," they said; and then no one would take it back. Then Snorri the Priest said, "My counsel is, that Gizur the White and Hjallti Skeggi's son keep the money till the next Althing; my heart tells me that no long time will pass ere there may be need to touch this money." Hjallti took half the money and kept it safe, but Gizur took the res
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