He'd cooked so he let her clean, other than scrubbing the grill.
"Kaggath rules can vary. Some modern versions of the Empire have tried to ban the kaggath. There was a time, as a Sith warrior, when I advocated for more kaggaths. It's a useful mechanism. One Sith Lord declares it against another, a defined region of contest is picked - an arena, a planet, a sector - and they bring to bear all their resources within that area. The winner takes the loser's resources and erases his name, at least classically. In theory it's a great leveler to ensure the strong are the strongest. If I thought I could beat the Emperor, for example, I could challenge him to a kaggath, and if I somehow won, there we go, the empire has a stronger Emperor. It's also the closest thing the Sith tradition has to an accountability mechanism and code of conduct for Sith. Kidnap someone's grandchildren, get a kaggath claim, stand or fall. The stakes of a kaggath can be so severe that it's really only suitable for extreme situations like that, for overriding personal motives. Because a stronger Sith would never lower himself by declaring it against a weaker one, and a weaker one would never take on the risk of declaring it against someone much stronger, and peers would be too close a contest to chance it too, not without a reason."
He put the grill up to dry and returned to his comfortable seat.
"Rules and norms of behaviour apply even to Sith Lords. So we get...dissidents staying respectable rather than speaking up."