They didn't seem to be in the cheeriest of moods which, Jack supposed, made sense. Rookwood, for all his cool, seemed shaken to his very core, a condition Jack found intriguing. People revealed a lot of who they were when they felt they were at a total loss. And you didn't get much more of a total loss than losing an entire train full of defenseless children for whom you were responsible.
Jack was known to be a bit... harsh, when it came to these matters. She had, after all, thrown not one, but two men out of windows before, and had even physically assaulted a man she thought to be impersonating a family member. But her ideas of black and white justice, stark differences in morality... well, that all went out the door the more one became wrapped up in politics.
Maybe she was still that same You're with us or you're against us type, but this situation, or rather, the people responsible didn't deserve her passion. It would be lost on them. With the world finally in the uproar she had been in for what felt like her entire adult life, she found herself remarkably in control.
Perhaps that was what led her to redirecting Rookwood's bottle-clad arm towards Michael when he offered if to ladies first. She gave Michael a cheeky smirk to ensure the joke was not lost, and decided to answer. Because this lady had some answers.
"Where they are is probably going to be the last place we check," Jack said, finding she almost enjoyed the fact that this was probably endlessly frustrating to him. "As for me, I doubt the who is any faction, unless we have some rogues. Otherwise, someone would have spoken up or claimed credit. The question we're working on now is 'how.' It might provide the key."
She cleared her throat. "The ferry to Ilvermorny had some problems of it's own, if you didn't know. I've actually," she glanced to Michael, knowing this next bit was probably news to him "I've actually got some people working on that one."
She didn't bring out her suspicions that this might answer more than the question of how, instead keeping that to herself and turning her eyes back to Rookwood. "So, what. You don't have anything for us? No nugget of suspicion, no thought that, in hindsight, offers any context? You were just blindsighted?"
And for the first time in their conversation, she wasn't trying to make this harder on him. These were actual questions she needed the answers to. Even in negation, the answers could help narrow down the search.