Rumors about Meghan Markle’s second pregnancy have been ripe shortly after she gave birth to Archie on May 6.

Now, bookmakers Coral revealed that it is possible for the Duchess of Sussex to welcome her second child next year.

Spokesperson Harry Aitkenhead told Express that the odds of Prince Harry and Markle welcoming another baby in 2020 are at ½.

“Harry and Meghan have made no secret of their desire to have another child. We make next year the hot favorite for the year that it is born. The couple is at odds to welcome another royal baby to the world in 2020,” he said.

As of late, the Sussexes have not announced anything regarding Markle’s alleged pregnancy. But royal fans are convinced that she could be expecting since she has once again been putting her arms over her belly.

The “Suits” alum engaged in the same gesture repeatedly throughout her first pregnancy. But Fatherly encouraged the public to stop speculating on the Duchess of Sussex’s pregnancy.

“Knock it off. Meghan and Harry, like all young parents, deserve the chance to raise their family in peace, unmolested by those who won’t let a complete lack of evidence stand in the way of good gossip,” they said.

However, this never stopped royal fans and critics from speculating even more. In fact, netizens have also been spreading rumors about Prince Harry and Markle’s marriage.

On Twitter, one person claimed that the royal couple is either close to getting a divorce or they have already divorced.

“They don’t live together. They don’t have Archie and never have, and Meghan was never pregnant. She used a surrogate, that is nuts. Meghan cannot physically have kids. I think this is what pissed off Harry,” Twitter user @Honey19996 wrote.

Twitter user @TheRealMissBev sarcastically said that the earth is flat and vaccines cause autism.

“I have not had the time or the desire to get into the earth is flat theory,” @Honey19996 replied.

Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex attends the annual Remembrance Sunday memorial at The Cenotaph on Nov. 10, 2019, in London, England. Chris Jackson/Getty Images