Let's go back in time to the present, when Charles' 75th birthday is almost here. Imagine a slightly different family portrait: Kate casually throwing away cosmetics, William and Harry fighting and teasing one other in a less-than-royal manner, and a chorus of voices shouting about their individual truths. As everything is going on, the young princes and princesses, who are strangers to one another, are confused.
With his wayward son now living in California more than ever, how is the King faring? It appears not well, and the prognosis is not good. The igniter? a text. Yes, 'Endgame', the next book written by Omid Scobie, a devoted supporter of Sussex, is a follow-up to the laudatory 'Finding Freedom'. Get ready, palace and all those involved in the royal story. "Endgame" promises to be a sharp indictment of the monarchy's uncertain destiny.
The plot premise alone is dramatic: a prince wronged by his own blood, an ambitious heir, and an unloved Queen prepared to protect her reputation at any costs. With chapter headings like "The Queen Is Dead," "Shaky Ground," and the powerful "Race and the Royals: Institutional Bigotry and Denial," Scobie seems primed for a literary conflict.
Reports state that if racism is accused, Buckingham Palace won't remain silent. According to The Daily Mail, any such charges will be vigorously contested rather than accepted with surrender. This is not just chatter about the palace; it suggests a willingness to confront scandalous allegations head-on.