This week, it was reported that Duke Camf of Cambridge signed the COVID-19 contract in April, not long after his father, Prince Charles. One source said Shahi “was hit very hard by the virus – it really hit him for six years”.
Duke reportedly kept his positive case a secret from the public because “he didn’t want to worry people.”
However, William did not hide his positive test results from the Royals.
A royal source told Vanity Fair that Duke’s case was “not a secret in the family”.
They also appeared to be disputing claims made by the Sun’s source, urging the Duke to “really deal with the virus” and that he was not bedridden.
Indeed, it is believed that William would continue to carry more than a dozen calls in most illnesses.
The source added that the queen was worried that both her son and her grandson had fallen ill with COVID-19.
Read: Kate Middleton pays heartfelt tribute to Kate Garaway at ‘Pride Britain’
Prince Charles became the first prince to fall ill with COVID-19 in late March.
The 1-year-old said he “got a little lighter with her” after a few months.
At the same time, Prime Minister Boris Johnson also fell ill with the virus and was later admitted to hospital.
News of William’s coronavirus case, meanwhile, has raised questions about why the Royal Family did not make it public.
A Kensington Palace source said the fact that the prime minister was in hospital was one reason to cover the news.
They told The Telegraph: “People were scared. People were already worried enough without adding it to ours. “
Despite the alleged coronavirus case, Prince William engaged in several high-profile engagements during the month of April after the UK was placed in a national lockdown.
On April 16, the Duke spoke to staff at Birmingham’s newly opened NHS Nightingale Hospital to congratulate them on the project via video call.
William said: “The building you are standing in is another example of how people across the country have moved toward this unprecedented challenge.
“Nightingale Hospitals will go down right as a milestone in the history of the NHS.”
That month, he appeared in the comic Relief for Blackdader-themed television sketch with comedian Stephen Fry.