I Can Copy And Evolve Talents - Chapter 1298 Chaos Ascendant

Chapter 1298 Chaos Ascendant
Not the brown-olive skinned, horned figure he’d last seen. Not the battle-forged frame with obsidian eyes and dark ridged horns curving from his temples. This was something—someone—who looked completely, utterly, impossibly human.
The figure appeared to be perhaps thirteen or fourteen years old. Sharp features, aristocratic in a way that suggested old bloodlines and careful breeding.
Dark hair that fell in artful disarray across a face that could have belonged to any noble’s son in any kingdom across the realms. Pale skin unmarked by scales or ridges or any hint of his true nature. And eyes—those eyes were the only remnant of what Nebulous Lord had been.
They held depths of absolute darkness, but now those depths were threaded with veins of violet chaos that pulsed with inner light, like distant stars burning in a void sky.
The teenager looked down at his own hands, turning them over with an expression of profound fascination. His fingers flexed, spread, curled into fists and opened again. He touched his own face, traced the line of his jaw, pressed fingertips to cheekbones as if memorizing their shape.
Then he looked up at Northern.
And smiled.
‘Don’t—’
“Master!” The voice was different too—younger, brighter, almost musical in its enthusiasm. “Look! I have no horns!”
He pointed at his own head with both hands, grinning with entirely too many teeth.
The gesture was so incongruously childish that Northern felt something between a laugh and a groan building in his chest. This was still Lord. This was still his void creature who had consumed chaos itself. And he was bouncing on his heels like a child showing off a new toy.
“I can see that.”
“I can hide them now!” Nebulous Lord—because this was still undeniably Lord, despite everything—continued bouncing slightly on his heels, practically vibrating with excitement. “Watch, watch!”
His form rippled like a stone had been dropped into still water. The dark horns emerged from his temples, curving upward in their familiar sweep—and for just a moment, he looked like himself again, like the monster Northern had created from void and will. Then the ripple passed, and they were gone, leaving only smooth skin and dark hair and that impossibly human face.
“See?” Lord was practically incandescent with joy. “I can be human now. Completely human! No one would ever know I was—” he paused, searching for the word, his brow furrowing in that way that made him look even younger, “—me.”
Northern approached slowly, studying his summon with the analytical attention he gave to new abilities and potential threats. Lord’s new form bore scrutiny well—there were no seams, no tells, no obvious markers that suggested monster beneath the skin. Whatever this evolution had done, it had done thoroughly.
“Show me your status.”
Lord tilted his head, birdlike and curious. “Uh? How do I do that? Oh! A demonstration?!”
Northern sighed. ‘Aoi.’
[Analysis will take a moment.]
Northern had to wait for a couple of seconds with Nebulous Lord cocking his head left and right, examining his own fingers again, poking at his own cheeks—before eventually the information materialized before Northern’s vision.
[Monster Profile]
Name: [Nebulous Lord]
True Name: [Unattained]
Rank: [Destroyer]
Danger Level: [Apex]
Attributes: [Formless], [Chaos-Touched]
Core Abilities: [Omniform: Chaos Ascendant]
Northern’s eyes narrowed at the changes. A new attribute. An evolved core ability. He pulled the detailed description.
Omniform: Chaos Ascendant: [Having consumed Chaos itself, a creature that rules over the body and power of all it consumes has transcended the limitations of stable form. It can now become anything it has consumed with perfect fidelity—including the contradictions inherent in Chaos. This grants access to forms that should not be possible, shapes that exist between states, and the ability to maintain multiple contradictory physical properties simultaneously. Additionally, forms no longer require maintaining consumed essence—they are permanent additions to its repertoire, able to be recalled at will.]
Northern read the description twice.
‘Permanent additions. He doesn’t lose the forms anymore.’
That was significant. Previously, Lord’s transformations had required ongoing essence maintenance—becoming something meant spending resources to remain that thing. But now, every form he consumed became a permanent part of his library. A toolkit that only grew, never diminished.
And the bit about “forms that exist between states”—that opened possibilities Northern hadn’t considered. A being that could be simultaneously solid and intangible. Present and absent. One thing and its opposite, held together by chaos logic that defied conventional physics.
“Master?” Lord’s voice cut through his contemplation. The summon had moved closer while Northern was reading, those chaos-threaded eyes watching him with a mixture of hope and uncertainty that looked painfully human on his new face. His hands clasped together in front of him, fingers interlacing and unlacing in a nervous rhythm. “Did I do well?”
Northern looked at him—really looked. At this creature he’d created from void and will, who had grown beyond anything he’d expected. Who had consumed chaos itself and emerged not corrupted, but elevated. Who stood before him now wearing the face of a human teenager because he’d wanted to learn how to not frighten the people his master cared about.
Something warm shifted in Northern’s chest. An unfamiliar pressure behind his ribs.
‘When did I start caring this much about a summon?’
But he already knew the answer. From the beginning. From the moment Lord had looked at him with those void-dark eyes and asked how to help. From every battle they’d fought together, every evolution Northern had witnessed, every moment Lord had thrown himself into danger without hesitation because Northern needed him to.
“You did well,” Northern said, and meant it. “Better than I could have hoped.”
Lord’s smile widened—still too many teeth, still slightly wrong, edges like that of a shark—but somehow more endearing for it. His whole body seemed to lift with the praise, shoulders straightening, chin rising. Pride radiated from him like heat from a flame.
“I learned something else too,” Lord said, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper that was utterly unnecessary given they were alone in the Soul Forge. He leaned forward slightly, as if sharing a secret of cosmic importance. “While I was changing. I learned that Chaos doesn’t destroy form. It—” he struggled for words, his new face scrunching with effort, “—it makes form into a choice. Everything can be anything. The rules are… suggestions.”
Northern filed that away. The philosophical implications of a being who could treat physical laws as suggestions was something to explore later. Probably something to worry about later, too.
“Can you still fight in this form?”
Lord’s expression shifted—that teenage face suddenly carrying something ancient and cold. The violet threads in his eyes pulsed brighter, and for just a moment, Northern saw something else looking out at him. Something vast. Something hungry. Something that had eaten a primordial parasite and made it part of itself without flinching.
“I can fight in any form, Master. I am all of them now. The human, the monster, the void, the chaos. I simply choose which face to show.”
The temperature in the Soul Forge dropped several degrees. The shadows deepened at the edges of Northern’s vision. This was the truth of what Nebulous Lord had become—not a monster playing at humanity, but something beyond both. Something that wore forms like clothing and could shed them just as easily.
Then Lord blinked, and he was just an excited teenager again, bouncing on his heels with that too-wide smile.
“Can I show mother? Eisha? I want to show her I can be normal now! I practiced smiling while I was in the cocoon. Watch—”
He smiled.
It was still wrong. Still slightly too wide, too bright, too eager. The teeth showed too prominently and the expression didn’t quite reach the right muscles around his eyes. But it was better than before. It was trying to be human, and the effort itself was something.
“We’ll work on that,” Northern said dryly. “But yes. You can show her. I think she’ll be relieved to see you looking less…”
“Monstrous?”
“I was going to say ‘intimidating.'”
Lord laughed—a genuine, bright sound that echoed strangely in the Soul Forge, bouncing off surfaces that shouldn’t have been able to carry sound. “That’s a kind way to say it, Master. You’re kind.”
‘I’m really not,’ Northern thought. ‘I’ve killed more people than you have. I’ve made choices that would horrify anyone with a functioning conscience. I am not kind.’
But he didn’t say it. Something stopped him—some new reluctance to shatter the image Lord held of him.
Instead, he opened the gate back to the physical world. Light spilled through, warm and golden compared to the Soul Forge’s eternal twilight.
“Come on. Let’s introduce your mother to your new face.”
Lord’s chaos-touched eyes brightened with that incandescent joy again. “She’ll be so happy! I can hold Silver without scaring her now! I can sit with them and look normal and—” He cut himself off, overcome with anticipation.
Northern paused at the gate, looking back at his summon—his creation, his responsibility, his… friend?
‘When did that happen?’
But perhaps it had always been happening. Perhaps bonds formed whether you noticed them or not, built from shared battles and quiet moments and the simple accumulation of time spent together.
“Lord,” he said quietly.
“Yes, Master?”
“Thank you. For saving the Queen. For doing what I asked. For… becoming this.”
Lord stared at him, and for a moment his teenage face looked lost—like he’d never been thanked before, never expected to be thanked, never knew what to do with gratitude directed at him. His mouth opened and closed. His hands fidgeted at his sides. The vast ancient thing behind his eyes seemed suddenly very small, very uncertain.
Then his smile returned, softer this time. More real. The kind of smile that didn’t try too hard, didn’t show too many teeth, just existed as genuine expression of something felt.
“I just wanted to help,” he said simply. “That’s all I ever want.”
Northern nodded once, something tight in his throat, and stepped through the gate.
Lord followed, wearing his new human face like a gift he’d been waiting his whole existence to give.


