The way the season one finale ended, things most certainly did not look good for Alison, Sarah, Cosima and co - and this season looks set to get under the skin of our favourite heroines. Sarah's emotional and personal investments have already been raced to extraordinary levels with Kira and Mrs S kidnapped, but with her birth mother Amelia's deathbed confession that Mrs S "is not who she says she is", it seems that Sarah's past will be addressed and explored, particularly the truth about what sets her apart from the other clones, as well as her relationship with best friend and foster brother Felix. One prominent theory is that Sarah is the 'original' clone, hence her ability to procreate, something not shared in her fellow clones (Alison's children are adopted after years of trying to conceive). But it's not just British born Sarah with emotional investments - Cosima's "heartbreaking" journey to try and find a cure for her genetic illness will no doubt see her work with new love interest and former handler Delphine to try and find something that can help not only her but her fellow clones. Her journey will see her move through her strong scientific passion and endure the consequences of 'science gone wrong'. Alison herself has more than enough on her plate with the emotional turmoil of kind-of-killing her former BFF Aynsley (after sleeping with her husband for thinking Aynsley was her handler), but no doubt she'll also have to deal with the shocking revelation that her husband Paul is actually her handler and has been for years, leading us to question how Alison will react and also commend Paul for surviving that glue-gun torture without breaking even a little bit.