My bet is on them being females. I have mourning geckos--all female. In the majority of cases of parthenogenesis, the mother essentially clones herself. They don't all have the same pattern because pattern is only partially genetic--it's also developmental. That's why identical twin snakes also do not have identical patterns. Genetically identical does not mean physically identical.
Komodo dragons are a highly unusual case--females that reproduce via parthenogenesis will have all male offspring (not a mix of genders). As far as I know, they're the only species that does this. (Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong).
It will be extremely interesting to hear if this female repeats the trick in the future! You may have better luck with clutches down the road, if you find them more quickly and get them into a stable incubator. Deformities such as you see there can be caused by improper incubation temperatures at crucial points in development, not just by genetics. (Actually, they're associated with incubation problems more often than with genetic problems).