Royal Family News
Meghan and Harry to Return to the US to Reunite with Children
After spending over three weeks away from their children, Archie, 3, and Lilibet, 1, Meghan and Harry are reportedly planning to head back to the US as soon as possible.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were in the UK for a quick charity tour when the Queen tragically passed away.
The couple then extended their trip to stay in the country for the funeral, indicating that they haven't seen their children in weeks.
Although the pair spent last night at Windsor's Frogmore Cottage, they will now head back to their house in California.
Prince Harry, 38, and Meghan, 41, traveled to the UK for their charitable tour to kick off the one-year countdown to the Invictus Games in Dusseldorf.
They were also scheduled to attend the Wellchild Awards on September 8 in London.
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However, Harry learned the unsettling information about his grandmother's hasty trip to Scotland's Balmoral while Meghan remained in London.
Unfortunately, he did not arrive home in time to bid his grandmother farewell, who passed away on Thursday.
During the moving service, Meghan shed a tear as she and Harry joined the grieving royals to pay their respects to Her Majesty.
While the Sussexes were away from their Montecito home, Meghan's 66-year-old mother, Doria Ragland, took care of the children.
The children were last seen by them on September 3, nearly three weeks ago.
The Sussexes had been in the UK before their trip to Dusseldorf, and Meghan had given a speech at the Summit for Young Leaders called One Young World in Manchester.
However, she incited rage after making at least 54 references to herself during her speech on September 5 at the city's Bridgewater Hall.
The Sussexes' departure comes after a heartbreaking 10 days for the royal family.
The King, Princess Anne, Princes Andrew and Edward, as well as the other members of the Queen's family, traveled to be by her bedside as she peacefully died away.
Following her passing, the family undertook an amazing tour, stopping in each of her four home countries to meet cheering well-wishers.
The Queen's family participated in funeral processions in Edinburgh and later in London, under the direction of King Charles, with the family keeping vigil in each city.
A quarter of a million mourners later stood in queues that extended five miles through the heart of London, some for as long as 16 hours, to view Her Majesty laying in state at Westminster Hall.
With the state funeral on Monday, the long period of national mourning came to an astonishing close.
During the procession, emotional scenes of the Queen's royal standard-draped casket carrying the Imperial State Crown, scepter, and orb, marched through central London.
For a never-before-seen event, hundreds of thousands of mourners descended upon London.
Many stayed up late to secure their spot along the route, which began at Westminster Abbey with a liturgy and continued down the Mall.
The Queen and her late husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, were ultimately laid to rest after a committal service in St George's Chapel that was aired worldwide.
In the chapel bearing George V's name at St George's, she was interred with her sister Margaret, the Queen Mother, and her father, King Charles III.
Camilla is rumored to persuade King Charles III to engage in a new soothing hobby because he is a workaholic.
According to author and royal expert Angela Levin, the Queen consort would urge the next king to take walks as a break from his demanding royal duties.