Back in Auwa
Lawrence remained in his village camp for three days, during which the rebels left him in peace, busy as they were, in fortifying their position. Unable to recommence the attack, Lawrence decided to fall back on Ajmer and Nasirabad and leave the rebels, thakurs and Auwa in general to their own devices. What he could not foresee was that in a matter of days, the Jodhpur Legion and Thakur Kushal Singh would part ways. The Thakur remained at Auwa, declining any temptation to join the Legion who now made their way to Delhi or, for that matter, his mutinous allies who had now decided it was time to overthrow the Maharaja of Jodhpur. The Legion, accompanied by the thakurs of Asop, Gular and Alania, marched through Merwar and Shekhawathi, committing mischief as they went on. They were half-heartedly pursued by the Jaipur troops who would not fight the Legion; so on they went until the news reached them of the fall of Delhi.
The objective gone, the Legion had lost their direction and was, in effect, leaderless. Their numbers continued to grow as fugitives from Delhi now joined their ranks among others, who included men of the rebel Nawab of Jhajar and Rao Tula Ram of Rewari; they would take their cause to a different field and advance instead upon Narnaul. The days of the Jodhpur Legion were drawing to a close.

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