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In a near-future Britain, certain children are born with the ability to manifest — to produce living, conscious genetic duplicates of themselves. The duplicates breathe, speak, feel pain, and plead for their lives. They are classified as biological material and harvested for organs. A pharmaceutical CEO receives a perfect kidney. A twelve-year-old boy wakes from sedation remembering nothing. His manifestation died fifty-three minutes after it was created, asking for help that no one in the room would give.Cloner Humanity follows one family's discovery that their youngest son, Janus, carries this ability — and the escalating consequences of trying to protect him while confronting what the manifestation system actually is.Lisa and Alec Wildmore have spent three years hiding on the Isle of Islay after the death of their toddler Jiminy, a manifestation child killed in what was made to look like an accident. Their other sons — Sebastian, Jeffrey, and Janus — are growing up in fragile peace. But Janus begins manifesting again, and the children he creates are unmistakably conscious, unmistakably human, and unmistakably dying.When a manifestation named Ben survives far beyond the expected lifespan, everything changes. Ben is articulate, intelligent, and refuses to be treated as disposable. The family is forced to confront a question they had been avoiding: if manifestations think, feel, and want to live, what moral framework justifies letting them die to protect the family's secret?The novel expands outward as the Wildmores connect with other families hiding cloner children. An underground network forms. A legal advocate named Rachel Mitchell begins building a case for manifestation personhood. But the British government and military have their own interests in cloner children — interests that have nothing to do with rights and everything to do with capability.The story escalates through medical crises, military confrontations, and the escape of endangered manifestation families, culminating in a Supreme Court showdown that will determine whether manifestations are people with constitutional rights or government property. The courtroom battle forces Britain — and by extension the reader — to decide where humanity begins.But even legal victory cannot resolve what the epilogue reveals. Manifestation children worldwide remain in danger. Private military programs never stopped their experiments. And the youngest member of the family, an infant named Hope, is manifesting abilities that no one has seen before — abilities that will make her the most valuable and most hunted child on the planet.Cloner Humanity is the sequel to the original Cloner novel by Emma Lorant (the pen name of Tessa and Madeleine Warburg). Co-authored by Richard Warburg and Tessa Lorant Warburg before her death in 2024, it continues the world she created while asking the question at the heart of all cloning fiction: not whether we can copy a human being, but what we owe that copy when it opens its eyes and says please.