King Charles despises his younger brother, former Prince Andrew, despite staying at Wood Farm just a few miles away from his disgraced brother.
The Times said the monarch has been spending time since Sunday at Wood Farm on the grounds of Sandringham in preparation for the UK bank holiday on Monday.
The newspaper reported that King Charles has no intention of spending time with Andrew, who lives in the same estate at Marsh Farm, despite their close proximity, after he was formally expelled from the Royal Lodge in February.
Representatives for Andrew and Kensington Palace did not immediately respond to Page Six’s request for comment on Monday.
Andrew was infamously ordered to leave his longtime home in October amid the release of a trove of new documents relating to the late convicted criminal Jeffrey Epstein.
He also lost his title of “Prince” at that time and is now called Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
It is noteworthy that they briefly stayed at Wood Farm in February before relocating to Marsh Farm.
Andrew was arrested in February on suspicion of sharing confidential documents with Epstein, who died in 2019, and an investigation is underway.
Earlier this week, Thames Valley Police announced that they would be investigating the incident, which allegedly took place in 2010, as possible sexual misconduct.
Royal author Christopher Anderson said that before the recent snub, Duchess Kate was said to have been the first member of the royal family to divorce Andrew.
The Princess of Wales refused to interact with him during holidays and family events and “turned her back on him,” she told Page Six earlier this month in “Kate! The courage, grace and strength of the woman who would become queen.”
Anderson also said Middleton is “moving forward” despite the ongoing scandal.
King Charles’ snub came after Andrew Lowney, author of The Rise and Fall of the House of York, exclusively leaked to Page Six the off-colour pick-up lines that Andrew was said to have favored.
“His small talk line was, ‘How does it feel to get a royal kick in the thigh?'” Rowney claimed in comments published on Monday.
“So you have an extraordinary sense of entitlement, don’t you?”
The royal author also claimed there are “numerous stories” of former princes allegedly exercising “a strong sense of entitlement” and inflicting “sexual humiliation” on unsuspecting women.
