She is not above robbery or assault to get what she needs.
Sarah first encounters a clone when she comes across her doppelganger on a train platform.
Sarahs clone leaves her bag on the platform and steps in front of a train.
Being the con artist she is, Sarah quickly takes on her doubles life for drain her bank account.
The show respects its audiences ability to process information quickly and never devolves into expository filler.
Make no mistake; Sarah is not a good person.
She is a broken criminal and a user.
Yet, somehow the writers make the viewer care for Sarah.
She is further humanized by her motivations to make things right with the young daughter she abandoned.
Sarah thinks quickly on her feet.
Sarah does what it takes and is not above harming herself or others to get what she wants.
Rounding out the cast is the refreshing Jordan Gavaris as Felix.
Its long overdue that an LBGT character is presented in a darker tone.
Felix is part flamboyant queen and part streetwise survivor.
He is a drug dealing con man of morality as equally questionable as his foster sister.
This unwittingly gets Felix involved in the conspiracy.
Gavaris vamps it up and provides welcome comic relief in an otherwise deadly serious story.
How many Sarahs are there, who created the clones and why was Sarahs clone drawn to suicide?
This is smart sci-fi centered on some challenging characters that bend the edges of morality.
I look forward to seeing where it goes next.