Royal watchers have become engrossed with rumors that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle might be on the verge of separation, following discussions that the couple is progressively leading independent lives.

On TalkTV, Sarah Robertson, an entertainment journalist and royal expert, sat down with Kevin O'Sullivan to evaluate the gossip around the Sussexes. The conversation extended to conjectures about Prince Harry having a retreat for himself and the potential challenges within their Montecito home's confines.

Confirming Kevin's assertions, Robertson stated, "Well, I think all men like to have a bit of a boat hole for nagging wives. There is no exception...But yeah, he has this special bolt hole that he goes to when Meghan's being a harpy."

Robertson advanced the claims that the couple has been progressively establishing their own spaces. She affirmed that the trajectory started earlier this year, following the uproar surrounding Prince Harry's book, "Spare." She proposed that Markle deliberately distanced herself from her husband due to the contentious memoir.

"We've not really seen them very much together...He's been making [a] solo trip to the U.K. without her," she added. The royal commentator further referred to an incident in New York where they were accused of overdramatizing a paparazzi car chase, causing further public backlash.

According to Robertson, their career paths also seem to mirror their personal lives. Prince Harry will reportedly be in Germany for a four-month period for the Invictus Games, while Markle recently signed a deal with WME. "So, Meghan's trying really to sort of distance herself from her husband's image in public...and they're following increasingly separate tasks career-wise," Robertson noted.

However, these claims remain unverified independently by Business Times.

The couple, who failed to publicly acknowledge their fifth wedding anniversary last month, has stirred up breakup rumors. Further whispers suggest Markle celebrated without Prince Harry at a recent event in Los Angeles.