As a close pal of both Prince William and Prince Harry, it was inevitable the feuding brothers would both be invited to the Duke of Westminster's wedding.
The Duke, known as Hugh Grosvenor, is set to marry his fiancée Olivia Henson later this week at Chester Cathedral in what is being billed as the wedding of the year. Hugh is in the unique position of being tight friends with both William and Harry, despite their huge rift, and is godfather to both Prince George and Prince Archie.
However, with the warring brothers seemingly unable to put aside their differences and their feud threatening to overshadow the wedding, only William will attend the nuptials, despite Harry also being invited - and it has cleared the way for him to perform a special role.
According to The Times, Harry was invited to Hugh's wedding, but then over a phone call with the groom agreed to stay away in what is described as a "civilised understanding". This move in turn has cleared the way for William to perform his job as an usher at Friday's ceremony.
It is expected that William will attend the wedding without his wife the Princess of Wales, who is continuing her recovery following a cancer diagnosis. It is also believed that King Charles, a godfather of Hugh, and Queen Camilla also won't attend having just returned from France from D-Day commemorations the previous day.
Meghan Markle 'to unleash her own memoirs' as Prince Harry's drops next weekLast month, Hugh made rare remarks about his marriage as he visited Chester Cathedral - his wedding day venue. And he publicly spoke about those who have 'supported' him in the build-up to the big day.
"I think next time we're in here will be slightly more nerve-wracking. But I'm unbelievably excited," he told Town & Country. "I just wanted to make it very clear how unbelievably helpful people have been, how supportive they've been so far which I'm unbelievably grateful for.
Hugh became the 7th Duke of Westminster when his father sadly died from a heart attack at the age of 64 in 2016. At the time of his succession, he inherited an estimated wealth of £9billion and gained several new estates.
He became the head of The Grosvenor Group, which means he owns several huge areas of London, as well as land and over 1,500 buildings all across the world. In London, the group owns Park Lane, half of Mayfair and 300 acres of Belgravia.
The family also has several enormous estates that include Eaton Hall in Cheshire and the Abbeystead Estate in Lancashire, as well as homes in Scotland and Spain. Some of the most notable buildings owned by the group include the Liverpool One shopping centre, a residential tower in Tokyo, a large chunk of Silicon Valley in California and Annacis Island, near Vancouver.