Although the Duchess of Sussex has not seen her father-in-law, King Charles III, for more than three years, a meaningful reminder of her remains prominently displayed inside his London home.

A Meaningful Image Takes Centre Stage

On Thursday, Meghan, 44, made an unexpected appearance at Clarence House — not in person, but through a striking black-and-white photograph placed in the King and Queen’s living room.

The framed image captures the intimate moment from Meghan and Prince Harry’s 2018 wedding when Charles escorted his daughter-in-law down the aisle. The photograph sits on a side table beside another image showing the Duke and Duchess of Sussex during the christening of Prince Louis, now seven.

The two photographs were taken only weeks apart. Prince Louis was christened on July 9, 2018, just seven weeks after Meghan and Harry married on May 19 that same year.

Spotted During a Festive Royal Event

The images came into view as Queen Camilla welcomed children supported by Helen & Douglas House and the Roald Dahl Charity to Clarence House for a festive Christmas tea party and tree-decorating event.

“The festive tradition is now in its 20th year and brings together families for a truly memorable day,” Buckingham Palace said when releasing footage from the celebration.

According to royal reporter Richard Eden, the placement of Meghan’s photo was anything but accidental.

Eden claims the display is part of a deliberate effort by the palace to slowly ease tensions with the Sussexes.

Dubbed “Project Thaw,” the initiative is reportedly designed to “warm up the Duke and Duchess’ frosty relationships with the rest of the Royal Family and with the British people,” Eden told the Mail UK on Friday.

The timing also aligns with Prince Harry’s recent progress in his long-running dispute over security arrangements in the UK.

Security Developments and Possible Return

This week, it emerged that a new threat assessment has been ordered — the first since Harry stepped back from royal duties.

“My sources say the new risk assessment could result in taxpayer-funded police protection being restored to the Sussexes,” Eden said, adding that officials believe the family may “spend much more time in Britain than previously.