Meghan Markle’s Frogmore Cottage journal may prove useful in the future, according to a royal expert.
Meghan Markle may want to “look forward” and put the royal drama in the past however, she will always have a secret “weapon in her back pocket” if she ever wants to “avenge” the Royal Family, a royal commentator has claimed.
The Duchess of Sussex has previously opened up about her struggles during her time as a working royal through a series of interviews and her Netflix documentary with Prince Harry.
Following the Duke’s release of his memoir, Spare, last year, rumours started swirling about whether Meghan would ever release her own book about her experience with the royals.
In 2022, two years after she left the Firm and moved back to the US, the Duchess famously spoke to the Cut and opened up about one of her visits back to the UK that year while packing her stuff up from Frogmore Cottage.
Harry and Meghan were given Frogmore as a wedding gift by the late Queen Elizabeth, however, they were asked to vacate the property last year after Spare’s release.
Meghan Markle could still have leverage against the royals, says expert
Meghan Markle quit the Royal Family in 2022
Meghan told the Cut: “You go back and you open drawers and you’re like, ‘Oh my gosh’. This is what I was writing in my journal there?”
Her comments prompted many royal watchers to speculate about whether the Duchess would ever pen her own book.
Now royal expert Jennie Bond told OK! that Meghan’s Frogmore journal may just be her “potential weapon” against the royals if she ever seeks “revenge”.
She said: “It’s more than two years since she gave that interview, and she has steered clear of controversy about the Royal Family since.
“Obviously the journal she mentioned will remain a potential weapon in her back pocket if she ever feels the need to seek some sort of revenge. But she has behaved with discretion and dignity ever since Oprah and the documentary series.
“I think she is looking forwards, not backwards and is moving on with her life. So I don’t think we should be raising false alarms about any potential memoir.”