The first World War brought her to Paris. She worked for the Red Cross in
Rouen. At that time, several secret services were interested in her because she expressed strong criticism of British and French colonial politics. After falling in love with him, she traveled to her lover Bernard Lavergne who settled in Algiers. She traveled into the desert on horseback and contributed to health care for the Berbers. Her social involvement was further demonstrated by her call for the Berbers to demand better facilities. A new lover, the Georgian prince Grisha, led her to
Georgia. She wrote about this trip and her affair in her book
Au Pays de la Toison d’Or (1924). In late spring 1921, while staying with friends in
Istanbul and two days before she would have travelled to
Batum, she was arrested by the British military police, extrajudicially and presumably for her socialist leanings, and was deported to
Sebastopol in Russia. For three months she endured the abuses of the
Cheka, before she was let go to
Kharkov. She wrote about her arrest and experiences in Russia in
Sous Lénine. Notes d’Une Femme Déporté en Russie par les Anglais (Paris 1922). == Wells and the search for a third way ==