Eisen and Bones return to the church with the grim, but somewhat expected news of the murder of the chief's wife and daughter. The old woman, mother to the chief's wife broke down sobbing, and needed the assistance of a few of the village women, who were now finally calming down after Muta's body had been dragged to the church.
All in all, there were five deaths that the Nazis had visited upon the people of Orino Perro. Bones barely said a word, his face was a thundercloud; dark, stormy, and full of impending violence. He seemed to be blaming himself for what had occured. When he did speak, he would often mumble in a sort of dazed state. "... if I had only been here..." regardless that had he been, likely just as many would have died, and he taken away to be the Nazi's guide rather than the League of Nations Expedition.
When asked what they had found, Bones responded with a solemn, "Ask Eisen, or go see for yourself."
The entire party was together once again though, as Eisen and Bones made it back to the church shortly after the commotion that had been brought about by Max, John, and Pingo's... kill.
More questions remained than immediate answers, but the group felt that they would need to make some sense of the village's recent events... especially with what had occurred to Muta.
Hours have now passed since the party had first entered the quiet village. Bones was given the "all clear" to get his boat running, and he left to go finish the work that he had left.
By 4PM in the afternoon the 100-foot, steam-powered river boat El Halcon came chugging down the river, where it was met by Pingo who tied the ropes off on the Orino Perro dock.
Everyone
[spoiler]Now is the time to share some information with each other. You may be able to figure some things out a bit better. What happened when John, Max, and Pingo encountered Muta? What did Eisen and Bones discover in the chief's home? The open grave of Albert Dunning...[/spoiler]