The love story between Charles and Diana was a whirlwind for the public to absorb themselves into as the fairy tale marriage fell apart piece by piece.
Charles and Diana’s unhappy marriage was so highly combustible that royal protection officers were worried someone would get hurt.
In Christopher Andersens upcoming biography, “The King: The Life of Charles III” due for release on November 8, one of Charles’ valets remembers seeing Diana throwing names and mocking her husband’s obsession with the dreary-looking Camilla.
The valet watched on as Diana literally pursued her husband down hallways, up staircases and from room to room at Charles’ Highgrove House country retreat.
“Why won’t you sleep with me?” Diana is said to have asked her husband, who “had for all intents and purposes unilaterally called a halt to their sexual relationship,” since Prince Harry’s birth in 1984.
Charles supposedly gave Diana a sarcastic response and said, “I don’t know dear. I think I might be gay.”
During another heated argument, Charles childishly demanded that Diana give him respect that he felt his position warranted.
“Do you know who I am?” he demanded of his wife.
“Diana answered that he was a ‘f–king animal,’” writes Andersen. “You will never be King!” she shouted. “William will succeed your mother. I will see to that.”
Tensions only rose further in the royal household as time passed between the couple.
“The clashes between Diana and Charles were now so raw that ‘violence seemed inevitable,’” one bodyguard notes in the book.
Officers were constantly concerned over the access to shotguns, rifles, and pistols in the Highgrove manor home.
“The detectives in charge of protecting members of the royal family were deeply concerned that in the heat of anger, any one of these could be used to commit suicide, homicide or both,” writes Andersen.
The couple, who married in 1981, were miserable before their fairytale nuptials. Charles reportedly felt pressure from his father, Prince Philip, to marry and was irked that Diana giggled during the proposal, later calling her reaction “juvenile and unnerving.”
Diana, who was 12 years younger, soon realized that her fiancé was in love with his mistress, Camilla Parker- Bowles.
“Consumed by anger and frustration, both bride and groom separately cried themselves to sleep the night before the wedding,” writes Andersen.
The couple finally agreed to separate in 1992 and divorced in 1996. Just a year later, Diana tragically died in a car accident at age 36.