Queen Consort Camilla has reportedly been left reeling by Prince Harry’s claims about her in latest interviews.
Camilla’s shut pal informed Vanity Fair that the previous Duchess of Cornwall is “just astounded by the whole thing.”
Sources near King Charles III, in the meantime, informed the journal that the monarch, 74, refuses to tolerate any feedback made about his spouse, 75, and believes his son, 38, crossed a line when mentioning her.
Harry’s newest onslaught of allegations embrace that his stepmother had planted tales to make herself look higher within the press after marrying Charles in 2005 following a extremely publicised affair.
“Certain members have got in bed with the devil to rehabilitate their image, but that rehabilitation has come at the detriment of others,” Harry mentioned in an interview with ITV.
The renegade royal additionally went after Camilla in his new memoir, Spare, out Tuesday, writing that he and his brother, Prince William, urged their father to not marry their “wicked stepmother.”
“Despite Willy and me urging him not to, Pa was going ahead. We pumped his hand, wished him well. No hard feelings,” he wrote. “We recognised that he was finally going to be with the woman he loved, the woman he’d always loved.”
Harry additionally opened up about how Camilla reworked his bed room into her private dressing room shortly after he moved out of Clarence House.
“I tried not to care. But especially the first time I saw it, I cared,” he wrote.
Neither Kensington Palace nor Buckingham Palace have commented on Spare.
The Duke of Sussex mentioned he has not spoken with Camilla, or his different members of the family, in “a long time.”
“I love every member of my family, despite the differences,” he mentioned on Good Morning America on Monday. “When I see [Camilla], we’re perfectly pleasant with each other. … I don’t look at her as an evil stepmother. I see someone who married into this institution and has done everything that she can to improve her own reputation and her own image for her own sake.”
This article initially appeared within the New York Post and reproduced with permission.