Shri Nathji had stayed at Hathras for about six days and at Agra for just  one day. The entire trip outside Delhi was over in just one week. Mateshwari  took photographs of this small excursion and later meticulously pasted the pictures  of the time in a little album.
    By the start of the second week of April 1947 Shri Nathji was back in  Delhi.
    After staying with the Bhutts for a while, he decided to go to Mussoorie  as the children’s school had opened in March and they had already missed many  of their classes.
    Shri Nathji was very concerned that the boys not miss school. It was for  that reason that he had come from Lahore to Delhi.
    At Delhi, Bhutt and his wife, Gangabai, pleaded with Shri Nathji once  again to give up the solitude of the hills and live with them, especially now  that there were disturbances everywhere and Mussoorie was a lonely place.
    However, Shri Nathji and Mateshwari had no alternative but to return to a  place where they had spent so many years in the past and where their children  were receiving education and where Shri Nathji’s health remained at its peak.
    Mateshwari, too, was very concerned that the boys’ education not be  interrupted for any reason whatsoever. She wanted both the boys to become  absolutely independent in life and to not to have to rely on the devotees of  Shri Nathji in any way. She had seen how the devotees frequently were found  wanting when it came to making any sacrifices for Shri Nathji’ sake; she had  also seen how difficult it was to be financially dependent upon the little sewa  that they did.
    And thus it was that Shri Nathji, Mateshwari and the children, prepared  to leave for Mussoorie in a car arranged by Bhutt, which belonged to his  friend.
    Bhutt was so concerned about Shri Nathji’s journey to Mussoorie in the  vitiated atmosphere that prevailed on the roads during the year 1947, that he  sought permission from Shri Nathji to escort him all the way to Mussoorie.  And it was thus that Bhutt went along with Shri  Nathji and his family in the car. Sahadeva Tayal, who had come from Lahore,  also went with them.
    As Shri Nathji left Delhi for Mussoorie, the few people who had come to  see Shri Nathji off, found themselves wrenched in their very hearts and souls.  It was impossible for anyone to bear separation from Shri Nathji, because he  was the very soul of their souls. All had tears in their eyes as they saw the  car carrying Shri Nathji drive away.
    There was the familiar Jamna Bridge, which had to be crossed to get out  of Delhi. Shri Nathji suggested to the boys that they throw some coins into the  river Jamna as an offering, even as the car crossed the massive iron bridge.  This was to become a routine with Shri Nathji. Every time they crossed the  river Jamna over the bridge, Shri Nathji would shut his eyes and bless the  river, even as the boys threw coins into its waters from the open window of the  car.
    The car found its way to the Grand Trunk Road, which went all the way  from Delhi to Mussoorie, passing through various cities along the way.
    Shri Nathji passed through Meerut, and then Muzzafarnagar, and reached  the outskirts of Roorkee.
    The Grand Trunk Road was to be blessed by Shri Nathji many times, and had  become a very special road. Shri Nathji would always refer to it with some  pride as one of the great achievements of the country.
    Whenever travelling back and forth between Mussoorie and Delhi by car  Shri Nathji would anxiously ask: “Have we reached the Grand Trunk Road yet?”
    In the car, Shri Nathji and Mateshwari sat in the back seat of the car  along with Pran Nath, while Bhutt Sahib and Sahadeva sat in the front seat,  with Priya Nath in the lap of Shri Bhutt.
    Somewhere  near Roorkee, a car appeared on the road, coming from the opposite direction.  The driver was drunk. Both the cars were travelling at a considerable speed. It  was a head-long collision. An ear-shattering sound went up in the air. One of  the cars appeared to have caught fire.
    No one  was injured, not even the drunk driver of the other car. Shri Nathji, along  with Mahamateshwari and Pran Nath and Priya Nath, Shri Bhutt Saheb and Sahdev  Tayal, got out of the car.
    The  car had come within inches of a large canal. It was only Shri Nathji’s  protecting shield that had saved everyone from physical harm – including the  drunk driver of the other car! A head-long collision at high speed usually left  few survivors.
    It was dark. The sound had attracted a group of Muslims who were armed  with lathis, knives and guns. They came towards the car.
    Shri Nathji fearlessly went out to them and explained the situation.  Those were fierce times. Muslims and Hindus were slaughtering each other  everywhere. Shri Nathji’s presence had so peaceful an effect on the armed group  that they gave up all hostile intentions, and, instead, procured a Tonga for  Shri Nathji and those accompanying him. Shri Nathji along with his family and  the two devotees arrived in the city of Roorkee in the Tonga, in the dead of  night.