A stunned Buckingham Palace insider whispered the audacious demand echoing through royal corridors: Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson, once inseparable in scandal and sanctuary, agreed to vacate opulent Royal Lodge—but only if King Charles grants them two separate Windsor residences.

Reports in late October 2025 revealed the couple—divorced since 1996 yet cohabiting at the 30-room Grade II-listed mansion since 2008—conditioned their exit on dual properties: Andrew eyeing Frogmore Cottage (former home of Harry and Meghan), Ferguson favoring Adelaide Cottage (soon vacated by William and Kate moving to Forest Lodge). “They want to live apart but nearby,” a source told The Sun, amid Andrew’s title revocation October 30 following Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025) naming him 88 times for alleged assaults.
Charles, sources said, viewed the demand as “brazen,” a “serious mistake” per experts like Jennie Bond: “Public fury over Andrew’s Epstein ties—Giuffre’s truth toppled him. Two homes rewards defiance.” The King reportedly refused, pushing Andrew toward Sandringham’s modest Wood Farm by January 2026, privately funded.
Ferguson, facing her own Epstein debt ties, reportedly felt “bereft,” insiders whispering “on the edge.” The couple’s audacious bid—raw entitlement amid exile—ignited outrage: #TwoHomesForAndrew trended with 3.2 million posts (78% critical). As disclosures concluded December 19—no bombshells—Giuffre’s legacy ensured the demand’s chill: power’s last grasp, denied.
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