Princess Vera lived with her mother and her brother George for the next two years in
Sweden, first in
Stockholm and then in
Saltsjöbaden. As Sweden proved too expensive to live in, Elizabeth Mavrikievna wrote a letter to
Albert I of Belgium, asking him to allow them to move to his country. In 1920 they relocated to
Brussels where they were frequently ill. In 1922, Vera's uncle, Duke Ernest II of Saxe-Altenburg invited them to move to Germany. During the War, she worked as a translator in a camp for prisoners of war. But German officials soon removed her from that position because she had tried to help the fellow prisoners. For many years, as she later recalled, she was haunted by the events of the Revolution. "I used to have the same dream, as if I stood with my back to a pit and they were going to shoot me...my awakening was not less terrible than the dream itself, because I was constantly afraid to open my eyes and see that they had really come to take me to the execution". At the end of World War II, in early 1945, American troops arrived in Altenburg. On hearing that, according to the
Potsdam Conference, Altenburg was going to be part of the zone of Soviet occupation, Princess Vera fled on foot. With her cousin,
Prince Ernst-Friedrich of Saxe-Altenburg, she had to walk 240 kilometers in 12 days, fleeing the advancing Soviet troops. Once safe, Princess Vera settled in
Hamburg on 5 January 1946. Until 1949 she worked as a translator in the British branch of the
Red Cross and later in the DP Medical Center. When this one was closed, she worked at the reception in another British institution. She belonged to no country, as she only had an ambiguous
Nansen passport, which gave her the ability to travel but no protections of statehood. Despite this, she refused to take the protection offered to her by various European countries, considering herself Russian. " I didn't leave Russia", she once declared, "Russia left me". ==Last years==