- In the second part of her riveting new book, the acclaimed royal author PENNY JUNOR reveals how, after a troubled start, the Prince came to terms with his father's love for Camilla
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No royal author has better insight into Prince William than Penny Junor, who has used her unique contacts to write the most definitive ever account of his life in a major new biography. In the second part of our unmissable series, she reveals how hard William found it to warm to the woman his mother always called the Rottweiler .â.â.
Two months before the death of the Princess of Wales, Prince Charles decided it was time to tell his boys about the woman he loved.
He sat them down together and tried to explain how Camilla Parker Bowles had re-entered his life â" after a youthful love affair â" and made him deeply happy. When heâd finished speaking, William and Harry were very quiet.
It was clear, Charles confided later to a friend, that William, in particular, just didnât want to know. For the time being, no more was said.

Stiff: William's relationship with Camilla could often be frosty
In truth, it wasnât as if William, then 15, didnât already know more than heâd ever wanted to about the woman whoâd rekindled her affair with his father while both were still married.
More than anything else, it was finding out Camilla was back in the picture that had enraged his mother and poisoned the atmosphere at home.
Diana had gone into meltdown â" despite the fact that her own infidelities had begun years earlier.
From then on, she and Charles could barely tolerate being in the same room as each other, let alone under the same roof. They saw their own friends, did their own things and lived largely separate lives.
On the occasions they were together, there were blistering rows, tears and hysterics, rage and fury â" all heard to some degree by everyone in the house. Kensington Palace was small and badly soundproofed, but not even the stone walls at Highgrove were thick enough to stifle their corrosive exch anges. Â
For two sensitive young boys, it was a tense and unhappy time. And although Charles never invited Camilla to either of his homes while the boys were there, William, at least, was fully aware of the reason for Dianaâs distress.
Indeed, Camillaâs name was never far from Dianaâs lips â" she called her âthe Rottweilerâ â" and the epithet was frequently accompanied by vitriol or tears. It was a lot for a child to handle.
What William didnât know for a long time was that Dianaâs suspicions were for many years completely unfounded.
They dated back to the early days of her relationship with Charles, when sheâd happened to come across a gold bracelet that Charles was planning to send to Camilla.
On it was a blue enamel disc with the initials GF, which stood for Girl Friday â" his nickname for Camilla. Diana, however, was convinced the entwined initials stood for Fred and Gladys, the pet names she imagined they called each other.
In fact, the bracelet was one of several pieces of jewellery heâd bought for special friends as a thank you for having looked after him in his bachelor years. And it had never occurred to Charles, who was surpri singly naive in such matters, that Diana might have a problem with a former girlfriend remaining in his circle of friends.
After she made it plain that she did, he simply severed all contact with Camilla. But Dianaâs suspicions festered, and years later she persuaded herself that her husband was back with his old flame.

Emotion: William and Harry view floral tributes to their mother
Charles, meanwhile, sank into a terrible depression. Eventually, his old friends grew alarmed, fearing he might be close to thoughts of self-destruction.
It was Patti Palmer-Tomkinson who put him back in touch with Camilla, whose own marriage had long been a sham because of her husbandâs infidelities. Camilla, felt Patti, was probably the only person who might be able to restore Charlesâs spirits.
As the world discovered in January 1993, she certainly succeeded in doing that. For Charles, publication of the so-called Camillagate tape â" a recording of a late-night intimate conversation heâd had with his mistress â" was the ultimate humiliation.
It wasnât so much that the heir to the throne had spoken about wishing always to be with the woman he adored. What provoked raucous reaction was that he mused about turning into a tampon to achieve this.
Even Diana, while enjoying a little schadenfreude, was embarrassed o n his behalf. And Charlesâs greatest fear at the time, he told friends, was not just for William and Harry, but also for Camillaâs children, Tom and Laura, who were a few years older.
He was right to be concerned. With every episode in the publicly disintegrating marriage of his parents, William was becoming less bold, confident and cheeky.
In particular, he was deeply affected at the age of 12 by the biography and documentary by Jonathan Dimbleby, in which his father admitted adultery. Yet as the young Prince grew more muted, his brother, still too young to fully understand what was going on, appeared to blossom.
It was becoming clear that William was taking on to his young shoulders the burden of responsibility for his parentsâ wellbeing and happiness. But because he loved both his parents, his loyalty and emotions were torn down the middle.
To be asked, on top of all that, to understand his fatherâs love for Camilla was simply too much. Sensibly, the Prince of Wales allowed the contentious subject to be dropped.Â
While Williamâs parents seemed hell-bent on self-destruction, the stability that came from other adults around him may well have prevented him from careering off the rails.
One of these was a ditzy young aristocrat called Alexandra Legge-Bourke, known as Tiggy, whom Charles hired after separating from Diana to act in loco parentis to the boys at Highgrove, his home in Gloucestershire, when he had commitments elsewhere.
At 28, Tiggy was a bundle of fun â"Â a cross between a loving, liberal mother and a slightly wild big sister. Unwisely, she said of her royal charges: âI give them what they need at this stage: fresh air, a rifle and a horse. She [their mother] gives them a tennis racket and a bucket of popcorn at the movies.â
Tiggy was refreshingly uncomplicated and William and Harry adored her.
She helped them load their ponies into trailers and took them to gymkhanas and polo lessons.
Together, they went rabbit shooting, fishing, climbing, hunting and go-karting.

Close: William and Harry adored nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke picture here with them playing near Balmoral in 1994
Diana, however, felt usurped. She started a rumour that Tiggy and Prince Charles were having an affair, âproofâ of which was an innocent kiss on the cheek captured by photographers.
Then the Princess left a series of disturbing messages on Tiggyâs answering machine. Her campaign culminated with Diana allegedly going up to her at the staff Christmas party and whispering: âSo sorry about the baby.â
As the Princess knew, Tiggy had recently been in hospital for a minor operation â" so the implication was that sheâd had an abortion. This was untrue and resulted in a lawyerâs letter â" but Diana continued to resent Tiggy.
When she discovered that Tiggy had helped Charles with the invitations to Williamâs confirmation, in March 1997, she went through the roof. If âthat womanâ was going to be there, she threatened, she wouldnât be attending herself.
What should have been a joyous and spiritually meaningful o ccasion for Prince William turned into another family nightmare.
Not only was Tiggy banned from the confirmation, but his grandmother, Frances Shand Kydd, was also absent â" because Diana was going through a phase of not speaking to her. In fact, the Princess had been asked to invite 40 people, but invited no one.
Williamâs love for his mother has never diminished. But even as a teenager, he was not blind to some of her more bizarre behaviour â" particularly when it caused evident pain to people he loved.

Now: Prince William with his wife Kate Middleton, who have just celebrated their first anniversary as a married couple
When it came to deciding whom to invite to the Fourth of June, Etonâs equivalent of speech day, he deliberately chose Tiggy â" and told his parents that he didnât want them there. At the end of the day, William went home to find his mother distraught and in tears.
Once her divorce had been settled, however, Diana seemed to enter a new phase and started to rebuild a civilised relationship with her ex-husband.
A month later, after the end of the summer term, she took William and Harry on holiday. Sheâd been invited by Mohamed Al Fayed, the rich Egyptian owner of Harrods, to spend some time with him and his family in St Tropez.
William wasnât thrilled. He loathed the paparazzi, and they were likely to be out in force, charting the burgeoning romance between Diana and Al Fayedâs eldest son, Dodi.
Diana was on the rebound. For two years, sheâd been having an affair with Hasnat Khan, a Pakistan-born heart surgeon, w hom sheâd met while visiting a friend at the Royal Brompton Hospital.
Sheâd made a point of introducing him to William, who never much enjoyed meeting her lovers â" though Harry was always more relaxed about it.
According to Dianaâs friend Rosa Monckton: âShe told Prince William in particular more than most mothers would have told their children. But she had no choice.
âShe wanted her sons to hear the truth from her, about her life and the people she was seeing, and what they meant to her, rather than read a distorted, exaggerated and frequently untrue version in the tabloid press.â
That same tabloid press, it must be remembered, to which Diana herself incessantly fed stories.
William and Harry didnât enjoy their holiday with the Al Fayeds. They hadnât particularly taken to Dodi; nor did they care much for his glitzy lifestyle. And they hated all the publicity.
Diana and William had a terrible row; Harry got into a spat with Fayedâs youngest son, Omar; and Fayedâs heavies attempted to give brown envelopes stuffed with pound notes to the Princesâ protection officers.
So it was with huge relief that the brothers flew back to spend the remainder of the holidays with their father, their grandparents and other members of the Royal Family in Scotland, while Diana arranged a further break with Dodi.
Less than a month later, both were dead.
The first call alerting the Royal Family to Dianaâs accident in Paris came through to Balmoral at one oâclock on the morning of Sunday, August 31, 1997.
Later that day, William and Harry had been due to fly to London and Tiggy had â" âby the grace of Godâ, as the Queen said â" just arrived to accompany them home.
The holidays were almost over and Diana had arranged to fly back from Paris to spend the last few days with the boys.
It was the Queen who advised Charles not to wake William and Harry when their motherâs death was confirmed. Strangely, though, William woke up many times during that night. He knew, he said later, that something awful was going to happen.

Hard act to follow: Diana, Princess of Wales, with Princes William and Harry on the Loggers Leap ride at Thorpe Park
How the Prince of Wales broke the news to his sons and how they reacted will remain between the three of them, though the memory of it will no doubt haunt him until the day he dies. William said he wanted to go to church âto talk to Mummyâ.
The country may have been angry at the Queenâs decision to keep her family in Scotland, but those days spent in the peace and solitude of the Highlands were a godsend.
For the next two days, William went for long, long walks alone through acres of heather and wild, craggy moorland as he struggled to take in the enormity of his motherâs death.
Aware that public emotion was building up, along with mountains of flowers and other tributes, Charles asked his press secretary, Sandy Henney, to prepare the boys for the scenes that awaited them on their return.
âI was going up and down these queues of people,â she remembers, âand I couldnât believe what I was hearing. It was ver ging on hatred for this family.â
To William and Harry, however, she put it more gently: âMummyâs death has had the most amazing impact on people,â she said.
âThey are really sad because they loved her very, very much and they miss her, and when you go down to London you will see something you will never, ever, see again and it may come as a bit of a shock. But everything you will see is because the public thought so much of your mummy.â
Harry asked a few questions, but William was very quiet. Not surprisingly, it was Harry, not William, who later asked to open some of the letters of condolence from the public.
At 15, William was no longer a young boy, but not yet a man; it was a difficult age. He didnât speak to Sandy about his feelings, and she never saw a tear; he appeared to internalise his grief, just as heâd internalised so much in his life already.
During the years she worked with him, from the ages of 11 to 18, she says he was always more guarded than his brother. âI think he has an innate sense of self-protection,â Sandy says.
âIf you ask him a personal question, he will be as honest as he wants to be, but you will never get down into the real root of William because thatâs how he protects himself.â
It was, she confirms, unquestionably the boysâ decision alone to walk with their father behind their motherâs coffin â" though their uncle, Earl Spencer, had wanted to be the sole walker and slammed the phone down on Charles when he said he would be walking too.
At times in Westminster Abbey the music, the poetry and the oratory were too much for William.
Tellingly, despite Earl Spencerâs fierce funeral oration, in which he pledged to protect William and Harry â" his âblood familyâ â" the only Spencer relation with whom William has much contact now is his aunt, Lady Sarah McCorquodale.
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'The Rottweiler': The name given to Camilla by Diana before her death
After the funeral, Charles took William and Harry home to Highgrove, where Tiggy helped keep their spirits up. William, who has the Windsor ability to keep his emotions hidden, appeared to be remarkably controlled.
With school starting just a few days later, he was soon enveloped in academic and sporting routines. He also visited the Queen weekly at Windsor Castle, which was just over the bridge from Eton; indeed, he became particularly close to her during this period.
But what probably helped the boys more than anything was having each other. They are such very good friends that the people who work for them now find it hard to think of them as separate entities.
Their closeness owes much to having grown up not knowing whom they could trust, who would be there next week, and who would be gone. What they could always be certain of was each other; and from a young age, theyâd come to rely on each other, almost to parent one another.
After losing their mother, the bond between them became their lifeline, and they clung to it. And despite being the younger brother, Harry was as much a support to William as the other way round.
They were also often partners in crime. Once, Charles asked Sandy Henney to discover if one of them had shot a favourite moorhen. Both were summoned to the office of Williamâs Eton housemaster, Dr Gailey.
As Sandy tells the story: âTheyâre looking at each other and saying, âShot the moorhen? Shot the moorhen?â Then William turns to Andrew and says: âWhich moorhen is that, Dr Gailey?â
âAnd Harry says: âThe one you told me not to shoot!â
âI said: âTell Harry heâs got 24 hours,â and bless his heart, he rang his dad and said, âIâm so sorry Papa, it was me â" I shouldnât have done it.â Those boys are so close to each other â" the loyalty between them and the mischievousness and sense of honesty .â.â.â
Harry may be full of mischief, according to a friend of the boys, but he often takes the lead when there are problems to sort out. Once, William grew frustrated at working out a complex seating plan with Charlesâs private secretary for a memorial service for his mother.
âWilliam got very fed up even just thinking about it and fi nally said to his office: âRight, thatâs it. Iâm off. You sort it out,âââ recalls the friend. âAt the end of the day, it was Harry who sorted it out. He just said: âF*** that,â picked up the phone and said âI want to speak to my father: put him through.â
âThen he just said: âRight, Dad, youâre sitting here, someone else is sitting there, and the reason weâve done it is blah and blah. All right? Are you happy?â âOh yes,â said Charles, âI suppose so.â
Problem solved. William gets quite buttoned up inside and angry about things and often itâs his brother who makes it happen. Heâs the sort of âCan do, f*** that, letâs just sort it outâ kind of guy.
âWilliamâs quite complicated and Harryâs not at all complicated: heâs one of the most straightforward people Iâve ever met.â
On the other hand, according to Sandy Henney, there was always something about William âthat meant you couldnât help but smile when he came into a room because he was always full of funâ.
Sometimes, perhaps too much fun. Colleen Harris, another of the Princeâs former press officers, admits both brothers did many mischievous things â" ânothing terrible, nothing criminalâ â" that never made the papers.
Once or twice, they did, of course: Harry was allegedly seen by News of the World reporters smoking cannabis and drinking under-age in 2002. But, says Colleen referring to both boys: âYou have no idea what was being covered up. Yes, it was terrible, but it could have been a lot worse.â
When it came to meeting the woman in his fatherâs life for the first time, William didnâ t want to be rushed. But he was also aware that as far as Charles was concerned, Camilla was ânon-negotiableâ.
Charles proceeded more cautiously after Dianaâs death. Eight months later, he decided to invite Camillaâs children, Tom and Laura, to stay while he and the boys â" and poet Ted Hughes â" were at Birkhall in Scotland for the Easter holidays.
The meeting could not have been more successful, and thereafter the children saw each other occasionally, both in the country and in London.
At much the same time, William and Harry began plotting a surprise party for their fatherâs 50th birthday that November. It started out as a party for the Princeâs godchildren and their parents â" and as Tom was Charlesâs godson, William realised heâd need to invite Camilla.
It was time to meet her, he decided. Although heâd heard a lot of terrible things about her from his mother, who spared him little, he was beginnin g to realise that not everything heâd heard was entirely true.
On June 13, he arrived earlier than expected at St Jamesâs Palace, while Camilla was staying for a couple of days with Charles, and went straight up to his flat at the top.
The Prince of Wales told Camilla:Â âHeâs here: letâs just get on with it.â
So he took her up to Williamâs flat, introduced them and left them alone to talk for about half an hour. At the end of the encounter, Camilla came out saying: âI need a drink.â

Coming to terms: Camilla Duchess of Cornwall and Prince William share a joke during a service of celebration to mark the Diamond wedding anniversary Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip
Despite the fact that it was less than a year since his motherâs death, William had been friendly and Camilla had been sensitive about his feelings. They met again for lunch a few days later and had tea a couple of times. Occasionally, sheâd stay over when he was in London and have breakfast with him.
Even so, Sandy Henney doesnât believe that first meeting between William and Camilla healed all the wounds. At most, he came away thinking she was not as poisonous as heâd been led to believe.
The boysâ surprise party for Charles was held on the night of July 31. The Prince was moved to tears by his childrenâs thoughtfulness, but what touched him most was their seating plan: theyâd placed Camilla next to him.
To the nation, it may have looked as though all was quickly forgiven and forgotten. But it took many years for William to warm to Camilla.
In February 2001, he agreed to be seen in public for the first time with her at a party. As one of those involved says: âPart of the thinking was that in order for the public to approve of Camilla, she had to be seen with the boys or it wouldnât work.
âI think the relationship between them all is warm now â" but if Iâm honest, it wasnât then. I think they found it hard. I remember Harry being uncomfortable and saying something awkward. It was difficult for them; it was a natural thing. You want your mum â" you donât want her.
âTo be fair to Camilla, she never tried to be Mummy but she was the âother womanâ and she was there and taking Daddyâs time. It wasnât all happy families for quite a long time, but William was happy to see his father happy.â
By 2002, Prince Charlesâs popularity rating was riding high. Having plunged by 20 per cent at the time of Dianaâs death, it had soared to 75 per cent â" largely because he was credited with being a good parent.
In sh ort, it was a very good time to marry Camilla. The fact that he didnât was because his sons had yet to be won round.
It was hard to forget that their mother had been tormented by this woman â" the third person in her marriage. Equally, they could see that their father was lonely, and that he sank easily into gloom and despondency when she wasnât around.

Kiss: Prince William kisses Camilla goodbye after The Sovereign's Parade at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst in Surrey
Three years later, when the wedding finally went ahead in 2005, William and Harry decided it was time to put their own feelings to one side. Together, they released a statement saying: âWe are both very happy for our father and Camilla, and we wish them all the luck in the future.â
Just a year on, the boys decided they wanted to stage a spectacular concert, followed by a memorial service, for the tenth anniversary of their motherâs death. Before the six-hour extravaganza at Wembley stadium in 2007, they banned all senior members of the Royal Family from attending â" thus avoiding any unnecessary awkwardness for Charles.Â
âThereâs no doubt that they love their father,â says a friend, âbut heâs a complex man and difficult to be the son of sometimes â" and his reactions to things arenât always as elevated as we might want them to be.
âAnything to do with their mother is really tricky. Theyâre very careful of Char lesâs sensitivities and dance around them a lot.â
Extracted from Prince William: Born To Be King: An Intimate Portrait by Penny Junor, to be published by Hodder Stoughton on May 10 at £19.99 © 2012 Penny Junor. To order a copy for £14.99 (inc. PP), tel: 0843 382 0000.
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Penny Junor is an unofficial apologist for Charles and has always made side swipes at Diane in all her writings about the Charles/Diane/Camilla triangle. DM: I challenge you to find a single article by Penny Junor that is complimentary about Princess Diana.
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Amazing how William and Harry can be so cordial with Camilla -, even with the bitter memories. First class and decent young men came out of those horrible early years with the drama brewing at home - they came out of it well - can't say the same for Charles.
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Could it be more obvious that this is an attack on Diana? The woman has passed, leave her to be. And do you think her sons will find it remotely comforting, an article insulting the memory of their mother?
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Why can't you let sleeping dogs lie. William is happily maried, Charles and Camilla are happily married, Harry is Harry and Diana is dead. and it all happened so long ago. Does this still sell papers and books?
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My last comment on this ridiculous book. Horrific that Charles allows one of his supporters to write a book so critical of his dead ex-wife. Amazingly, although Charles was brought up hearing about the fiasco of Mrs Simpson and Edward, he went and did basically the same thing again. Although Charles uses his two sons, repeatedly to gain acceptance for Camilla as his next Queen, I doubt the public will ever forget the cold and calculating way both he and his mistress treated a very young bride. I hope when William is King he will organise a wonderful memorial for his Mum, not the ghastly ditch in Hyde Park. Perhaps he will call his first daughter Diana!!! Charles must be thrilled he gave Kate Diana's ring!!!!!!! Ho hum......
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DM will you stop printing this clap trap - I am going to start boycotting your rag if you don't.
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was booted off by the DM for saying this: "31st August, the day the UK lost the plot" people crying in the street over an egotistical clothes horse. There, I've said it again. Get over it! - Nick Shires, Gironde, France, 7/5/2012 5:27 I had a similar experience when I pointed out Chelsy Davy's father had bad ties to the regime in Zimbabwe. There is no free speech on this board.
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I am disgusted by the way that Penny Junor is milking the current interest in Prince William (undoubtedly the result of his marriage to Catherine) by dragging out very old 'history', all of which everyone is already aware of. It is time to bury all this, life has moved on, there is no purpose or point achieved in this muck raking! Shame on Junor, shame on The Mail !!!
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Why does Penny Junor think we care, either about the drivel she writes or what she thinks ? She is an odious woman and no matter what slant you take, people have their own opinion of Charles, Camilla, Diana and she is not going to change it. If my husband was arrogant enough to call an ex girlfriend whilst on honeymoon with me, he too would be labelled a peasant (at the least). Charles and Camilla are married now, who cares about them, let Diana rest in peace and let her boys get on with their lives.
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Penny Junor clack ,clack, clack.
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