2.10 By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried We open with Sarah turning herself in to Dyad (and, echoing last week’s discussion of consent, we have Sarah pointing out that her “consent” given by signing the forms for Dyad to experiment on her are, in fact, not consent at all, given that she’s their prisoner). It’s heartbreaking to watch her turn herself in so immediately, because of course they got to her in the only way that would’ve made her run right into their arms. Even when they threatened Felix with a murder charge, she didn’t give in; only for her daughter would Sarah do literally anything. While Sarah’s in Dyad’s clutches, Kira manages to call Cal and ask for help, which leads to the brilliantly tense meeting between him and Mrs S., who frankly is not used to being around anyone with as vast a network of contacts and information as hers. It’s amazing. I’d watch an entire mini-series of just the two of them trying to one-up each other with their underground spy network. Fortunately, they manage to work together long enough to reach out to the person who spied on Cal through his webcam all those episodes ago. It turns out to be Paul and Marian, who are working as double agents inside of Dyad to find out the truth behind all this cloning business. Marian’s confident she can get Sarah and Kira out of Dyad’s clutches, but she wants to meet with Sarah privately to discuss a matter of mutual interest. Cosima takes none of this lying down; together she and Scott rig up a device that will shoot a pencil out of a fire extinguisher in the hopes that it might give Sarah a chance to escape. Indeed it does; when Rachel enters the operating room Dyad has prepared to remove one of Sarah’s ovaries, Sarah is able to shoot Rachel in the eye with it and flee. I have been wary of Scott since he came to work for Dyad, because on this show virtually no one can be trusted outside of the Clone Club and Felix. However, if anything could change my mind and teach me to trust him, it would be his utter dedication to Cosima in this episode. He advocates for her when Rachel changes her physician; he helps her rig up the device; and when it becomes clear that Cosima is too injured to execute the plan, he takes over without a second thought at great personal risk should he be caught. Scott, like Donnie, has earned a spot in my good graces this season. And so the clones escape and meet up at Felix’s loft, where they are reunited with Helena as she meets her sisters for the first time. I’m pretty sure my heart grew three sizes during the ensuing dance party as, for the first time in what feels like forever, everyone is happy. For one shining moment in time, we were able to forget that Helena is impregnated with Henrik’s child, that Cosima is deathly ill, or that Dyad still wants to destroy them all. It’s beautiful and cathartic and absolutely what we all needed. Sarah makes good on her agreement to meet with Marian and finds that Marian is raising a new clone; it seems that Dyad tried over four hundred times to replicate the cloning process, but without the Duncans, only little Charlotte survived. But she’s not done yet; the cloning experiments were initiated by the military, who contracted out the female clones to Dyad. The military themselves kept the other half of the project — Project Castor — and cloned males. And it’s really too bad that Henrik is dead because he’d probably wet himself with excitement over finding out just whose face those male clones are all wearing — Mark’s, who has just married Gracie. I think it’s safe to assume that no one knows Mark is a clone since, if anyone did it would’ve been Henrik, and life at the Prolethean farm would’ve been very different indeed. It does beg the question of if the male clones have health issues like the female clones’ respiratory problems or if the military was able to work around that. It also brings up how much of a role Mark and Gracie can play in the next season, given that they’re completely separated from everyone else. And why would the military want Helena? We can assume it’s probably for something related to Project Castor, but why her? What could they need a female clone for? Given that Paul seems to have arranged it, are we back to not trusting him again? So many questions and so long to wait for season three. Hit up the comments, Clone Club, and tell me what you thought of the finale. Read Kaci’s review of the previous episode, Things Which Have Never Yet Been Done, here. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.