ROYALS

Prince Harry's Bizarre, Salacious Claims In Book 'Spare,' Test King Charles' Patience With The 'Rogue Couple'

Keneci Channel

Prince Harry made cringy and salacious claims in his upcoming tell-all memoir Spare, ghost-written by American novelist JR Moehringer, some of which have drawn the ire of the British royal family and critics.

Some of the bizarre claims reportedly made in Spare by Harry -- like discussing his first time with a woman, questions over his parentage, and even how many Taliban he killed in Afghanistan, opening a clear security risk -- are sure to further sour his relationship with brother Prince Williams and King Charles III.

Harry reportedly claimed in Spare, that losing his virginity was “a humiliating episode with an older woman who liked horses a lot and treated me like a young stallion… I mounted her quickly, after which she spanked me on the backside and sent me on my way. One of my mistakes was to do it in a field, just behind a crowded pub. No doubt someone had seen us.”

This incident would have happened when Harry was still at school, aged 16 or 17, so no consent laws would have been broken under English law, which puts the age of consent at 16. However, top British actress Liz Hurley denied to the media last year, she had taken the Prince’s virginity. Hurley is a known fan of horses and horse racing, and even sold one of her horses for breeding to Queen Elizabeth II in 2011.

In another bizarre claim in Spare, Harry recounted a physical altercation he had with his brother Prince William, now the heir apparent to the British throne.

According to reported summary of excerpts from the memoir, the brothers apparently argued over the behaviour of Harry's wife Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex.

William reportedly told Harry he was trying to help him, with the younger brother responding: “Are you serious? Help me? Sorry – is that what you call this? Helping me?”

This apparently angered William, who reportedly “swore while stepping towards [Harry]” and Harry — “[n]ow scared” — retreated to the kitchen.

“Willy, I can’t speak to you when you’re like this,” Harry is said to have told his brother, handing him a glass of water.

“[William] set down the water, called me another name, then came at me. It all happened so fast. So very fast,” Harry continued.

“He grabbed me by the collar, ripping my necklace, and he knocked me to the floor. I landed on the dog’s bowl, which cracked under my back, the pieces cutting into me,” he added.

Harry said he “lay there for a moment, dazed” after his brother tossed him, before climbing to his feet and telling him to leave. William supposedly invited his brother, a war veteran, to fight back, but he was unwilling to do so.

William returned to the scene of the incident later “looking regretful” and offered Harry an apology, and suggested he did not have to tell Meghan “about this.”

“You mean that you attacked me?” the younger brother responded prissily, with William denying there had been an “attack.”

Harry did not tell his wife what had happened at first “but [he] did call his therapist.” He also claims the Prince of Wales called the Duchess of Sussex "difficult," "rude" and "abrasive."

While the publishers of Prince Harry’s book, have gone to great lengths to control the narrative leading up to its release including, some booksellers in Spain were reportedly willing to secretly sell embargoed copies under the counter today, a full five days before publication.

Buckingham Palace and Kensington Palace have so far declined to comment on the claims made in Harry's memoir. Royal experts say King Charles, who is likely poised to punish the rogue royal couple, hopes the strategy of silence will suffice until the Coronation in May.