If that fails I think your probably going to have to start from scratch and perform a clean install of the OS and all applications. If that fails to boot then attempt to repair the boot record on that drive. I will not guarantee you anything but if I were you I would remove the current disk from the machine which I suspect is now the cloned or target disk of this mess and reinstall the original disk into the machine and see what happens. It is further recommended that you perform a full disk backup of the source drive and verify that backup to be recoverable prior to any of this so that in the event something does go wrong you will have a working backup which can be restored to disk. This is all after you have first created the recovery boot media and tested that to insure that you can boot the machine to that device to begin with. Once booted into the Acronis True Image app you then perform the clone operation. You then would boot the machine using the recovery boot media which you must create yourself either on CD or USB thumb drive. Next would be to attach the target drive preferably via a second port internally within the machine and sans that via USB port. The correct procedure to clone a laptop System OS Drive is to first remove the original (source) drive from the machine, next attach the new (target) drive to the same physical port and location in the machine.
Granted the application does not tell you that during the process and so cloning can and does result in problems like yours. That is not per recommended steps of the documentation.
You say you followed the Wizard instructions meaning that you ran the process from within the Windows environment I take it.