On 13 May 1969, after his relationship with Thorpe, Josiffe (now calling himself Scott) married Angela Mary Susan Myers (1945–1986), sister-in-law of the English comedy actor
Terry-Thomas. Susan Scott was already two months pregnant at the time of their marriage and her family was not supportive of the marriage – her mother and sister refused to attend the ceremony and Captain Myers (Josiffe's new father-in-law) denounced Scott as
homosexual at the wedding reception stating that the marriage "was doomed". The couple had a son – Diggory Benjamin W. Scott, who was born, later in 1969, in
Spilsby,
Lincolnshire. Susan Scott left Scott in 1970, subsequently divorced, remarried in 1975 and died in 1986. In 1971, while living in
Tal-y-Bont in North Wales, where he found casual work, Scott met widow Gwen Parry-Jones, whose late husband had been a soldier in the
Welsh Guards. She was a former local village
postmistress and was an acquaintance of Liberal MP
Emlyn Hooson. Parry-Jones arranged a meeting with Hooson, who interviewed Scott (with Liberal MP
David Steel) about his relationship with Thorpe and started his own investigations, but could not substantiate the allegations. After the break-up with Scott, Parry-Jones became very depressed. In 1972, her aunt failed to get any response at her home for several weeks and the police discovered that she had died, which the coroner subsequently recorded as alcohol poisoning. After 1979, Scott retreated into obscurity. At the time of Thorpe's death in 2014, he was living in Ireland, In 2022 he published a memoir,
An Accidental Icon, which was received generally favourably, though reviewers expressed scepticism over some of his claims. ==In popular culture==