We drove up a steep hill for the latest alert from the control room. The track was extremely steep and our vehicle struggled to make it up.
Hilltop village has had a number of cases here in recent weeks. A few members of the burial team have already been here several times and know some of the residents.
One house sits at the very top of the hill. It belonged to 40-year-old Henry Sesay. He complained at the weekend of feeling unwell.
By Monday he could not eat or drink. He was found dead at his home last night.
The community gathered and there was another prayer led by the local imam.
The men in the community stood in front of the body and quietly chanted.
Despite all the efforts by teams to make the experience for families as bearable as possible, it is of course still incredibly painful for families.
But this is life in the time of Ebola and - a year since the initial outbreak - there is more acceptance of this new way of living.
Relatives grieve for Ebola victims