Driving deeper for about an hour into the hills will lead you to the town of Patan, at the end of which lies an enclosed valley. The Aravalli Range rears up on three sides as you enter the hollow where sits Patan Mahal, a restored 200-year-old palace, amid its fruit groves and vegetable gardens. As the eye travels up the green hillsides that enclose the mahal, it lingers on ruins from Rajasthan&rsquos feudal past stone walls, hunting towers, the ornate skeleton of Badal Mahal and, right on top, a 13th-century fort that guards the mouth of the valley. Time and weather have made these relics immensely picturesque and it is hard to imagine that Patan was the scene of a bloody battle between the Rajputs and Marathas with French troops in 1790 &ndash a fight to the death for a town prized for its riches. The Marathas won the war, eventually marking the end of the Rajput reign over Ajmer and Malwa as well. It is said that the Patan Mahal was so well endowed that it took three days for the marauders to loot it satisfactorily.