- Gwenda Halliday, a wealthy young Englishwoman recently emigrated from India, intuitively buys a seaside manor house, where she re-experiences a murder.
- Gwenda Halliday moves to England from India and moves into a house in a seaside village. She will soon be married and needs to renovate the house first. However, she keeps getting the strange feeling that she's been in the house before even though, as far as she is aware, she has never been in England before. Then a view of a part of the house sparks an image of a murder in her mind, and she gets extremely agitated. Her assistant, Hugh Hornbeam, is worried about her and calls in a friend, Miss Marple. It turns out Ms Halliday has previously lived in England, in that same house.—grantss
- A colonial tycoon sends his much younger bride Gwenda Halliday ahead for their Enlish wedding, to settle helped by single, devoted London firm assistant Hugh Hornbeam. She is drawn to the Devon coast, where she instinctively picks and buys a grand home, only gets nightmarish dejavus about a murder on a woman Helen and having grown up in the house, yet she knows not of even having left India before. Instructed by the boss to suss her, George brings in his aunt, miss Jane Marple, who is eager to help solve the mystery. They dig into Gwenda's early Devon youth with widower father Kelvin Halliday, meeting her surviving uncle, rehire the housekeeper and advertise for a former maid, who agrees to come only to be murdered near the local railway station. It all involves a disbanded local vaudeville company, whose surviving members are tracked down and questioned before the puzzle fits with an Indian diamond theft.—KGF Vissers
- Miss Jane Marple is asked to help Gwenda, a wealthy young woman who has bought a house on the English coast, only to experience disturbing visions. Thanks to Miss Marple's investigations, Gwenda discovers that, instead of spending all her life in India, she had lived in the house as a child. The visions are actually flashes of memory - and she realizes she witnessed the murder of a beautiful woman named "Helen".—Faaike
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