Baba remarked that his work with Chacha was now complete, and before departing he gave the great majzoob his own coat, which Chacha immediately wore. Baba also presented Chacha with a new turban and blanket, and then dispatched him in the litter back to his abode in Ajmer. This was to be their last meeting.
Baba stayed at Taragarh Fort that night, and the next day contacted a group of 44 widows living on the hill by giving them five rupees each as his love-gift.
Descending Taragarh, at five o'clock on the morning of 10 March, Baba entrained for Kishangarh. It turned out that the mast he had wanted to contact in Kishangarh had recently died, so Baba boarded a bus for Sojat, where he worked with a sixth-plane mast-saint known as Nuru Baba .
Heading back to Mount Abu, he stopped at the town of Abu Road, and communed with Khuda Bakhsh on the 11th. The mast gave Baba a lungi, which Baba later wore. It was added to the trunk containing the eclectic collection of articles presented by all the various masts. Baba returned to Mount Abu that same evening.
Kaka Baria had been called to Ajmer on the 11th. He stayed for two weeks and then returned to Meherazad on the 25th. Anna 104 had also been called from Meherabad, for watch duty at the women's bungalow during Baba's absence.
Four days later, on Wednesday, 16 March 1949, Baba again departed — this time bound for Ahmedabad with Baidul, Eruch and Gustadji. Baba contacted the mast Sayyed Nabi Mastan on the 17th, and gave him six cigars.
Baba and the three mandali spent the night in a place called Bibi's Rocking Minaret Mosque, and the next day proceeded to Cambay, where Baba contacted two masts, Rehman Shah and Bapu Kharaowala, both of whom he had worked with before. On the 19th, Baba returned to Mount Abu from Cambay.
A week later, on 26 March, Baba recontacted Mattragiri Maharaj , a high yogi who lived in a humble hut in the village of Oria, four miles outside the town of Mount Abu, not far from the mountain's highest crest.
Baba and the mandali encountered a local villager who told them stories about Mattragiri. The villager himself was past 40, and he remembered Mattragiri from the time he was a small boy, and explained that there had been no change in the yogi's physical appearance over the past 40 years.
