Royal weddings are supposed to be celebrations — soft lights, floral arches, elegant gowns, and carefully choreographed family unity. But behind the glitter, behind the polished photographs and smiling balcony waves, the monarchy is a family like any other: full of wounds, loyalties, histories, unspoken tensions, and lines that cannot — or will not — be crossed.
And sometimes, those lines are drawn with the force of a thunderclap.
Such was the case when Princess Anne, the famously blunt, steel-spined daughter of Queen Elizabeth II, reportedly delivered the four words now echoing through royal circles:
“Not bloody likely.”
Those words weren’t said to journalists.
They weren’t said for show.
They were said in a private palace meeting — and they were said about Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.

The question on the table?
Whether Harry and Meghan should be invited to Peter Phillips’ upcoming wedding, an event already anticipated to be one of the most emotionally charged family gatherings in years.
What followed was not just a rejection.
It was a revelation — about loyalty, hurt, tradition, and the deep fractures still pulsing beneath the Windsor family surface.