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I Can Create Clones

DaoistVmCfZq
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
For generations, the Drake Family has thrived on power, respect, and secrets buried deep beneath their noble facade. But beneath the grandeur lies a hidden truth—the Dirt of the Drake Legacy. Ethan Drake transmigrated into this world, only to be branded as a waste—lacking the talent that the family so desperately values. Without a notable cultivation root, he was destined for obscurity, dismissed as a failure. Yet, Ethan is bound to the Ascension System, a mysterious technology that allows him to forge powerful clones—each a step toward true strength. As long as he stays silent and hides his true power, he can craft a series of increasingly formidable avatars. After Two years of concealment, he manifests a Novice Level clone. Five years , a Elder Level Grade. Fifteen years, a Celestial (Preliminary) Grade—the pinnacle of potential in the current era. As Ethan brushes aside family expectations, cancels arranged marriages, and navigates relentless tests, he quietly builds his strength, playing the long game in silence. Twenty years later, a crisis erupts, threatening everything the Drake Family has built. When the moment comes, Ethan reveals his true power—no longer a disappointment, but a hidden monster capable of shaking the very foundation of their legacy. One by one, his secret clones rise, exposing the Dirt of the Drake Legacy—secrets that will shake the world as the true strength of the Drakes is finally revealed. ..... Hey! This is my first time writing a webnovel, and English isn’t my first language — so if you notice anything that could be better, feel free to leave a comment or review. I’d really appreciate the help! Thanks for reading.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Whispers of Talent

The Drake family chambers breathed with a silence so thick it could suffocate hope. Pale moonlight leaked through gossamer curtains, casting phantom shadows across polished marble floors that seemed to hold generations of unspoken secrets.

The room was quiet, almost reverent in its silence. Shadows pooled softly along the lacquered walls, broken only by the faint glow of a candle flickering on a nearby table. Outside, the world seemed to hold its breath — no wind, no distant voices, only the heavy stillness that settled like a thick cloth over the sprawling palace.

In the center, a woman lay on a carved bed of jade and silk, her delicate face calm but tinged with a faint trace of weariness.

Her eyes, half-lidded and gentle, traced the patterns carved into the ceiling's intricate beams as if seeking peace there. She did not speak; she only watched, her expression serene yet restless, as if her mind danced on the edge of a storm.

Some steps away, on a simple rock bed, a tiny figure stirred. The newborn's soft features, faintly pink and swollen, a tiny fist clutching at the air, were wrapped in fine cloth that shimmered with a subtle sheen.

There was a delicacy to the child that caught the eye — a fragile promise of potential yet to unfold.

Suddenly, the heavy silence was broken. The door swung open with a whisper of motion, and an old man entered, his gait measured but imbued with purpose. His face was weathered — carved by countless years and whispered secrets — yet his eyes sparkled with a quiet impatience.

Without a word, he approached the cradle and lowered himself on creaking knees, carefully lifting the tiny body. His gnarled fingers moved with gentle precision, pulling the baby's cheeks into strange, exaggerated expressions as if trying to coax a smile.

The old man's face twisted into a series of peculiar, almost comical shapes — each one designed to invoke joy, to pierce that fleeting veil of innocence with a simple, warm gesture.

The baby responded, eyes fluttering open for a moment before curling into a faint, tentative smile that seemed almost hesitant to appear. The old man's expression softened—his eyes crinkled with love and a touch of amusement.

From the shadows, footsteps echoed. A middle-aged man, his face pulled into a tight grimace that no amount of effort could soften, strode in with deliberate, measured steps.

The woman stirred from her resting position, rising with a fluid grace that betrayed no discomfort despite her tired eyes. She looked over at her husband—an expression of quiet concern flickering across her face—asking what had happened, what words had fallen from his mouth.

He hesitated only for a heartbeat. His gaze flickered downward, lips drawing tight as he summoned his words with slow precision. His voice was low, carrying the weight of unspoken worry and other kingdoms of despair.

"Alden's daughter," he finally whispered, voice gravelly but infused with a strange reverence.

"She was born with a—" He paused, as if weighing each word. "—a talent beyond what we've seen before. The sky was alive with strange phenomena at her birth — a sign, they say. She's born with a peak advanced tier spirit talent. Peak advanced tier spirit core, enough to shake foundations."

The woman's breath hitched. Her mouth parted slightly, a quiet clink of disbelief echoing in her mind. Why was that a bad thing? A ripple of confusion, maybe slight hope, flickered in her eyes—yet her voice stayed soft, almost hesitant.

"Why would that be a problem?" she asked.

The old man's eyes flickered brighter, a rare gleam of excitement amid his weathered face. His lips parted slightly—almost as if to speak, but the words came later, as he observed her, as if trying to gauge her reaction.

If only she could understand—the significance. The girl, the bloodline, the future of the family. His gaze lingered on the cradle, on the tiny, innocent face that had yet to realize the weight of her own existence.

"Her talent," he finally said, voice husky with hope, "is so great that the main family has already taken notice. She will be brought into the core, trained to serve, to rise. With her achievements—her power—her status in the family will grow beyond what we can imagine."

A flicker of something—veneration, pride—danced across her face as she muttered softly, "Genuinely a daughter of Heaven."

The middle-aged man turned sharply, eyeing the old patriarch with a guarded expression. His lips compressed into a thin line, but his voice was steady, almost clinical.

"I want to test him again," he said. "There's no way his talent can be non existent."

The old man reached beneath his robes and produced a luminous spirit stone, its surface rippling with runes and faint, pulsating light. Carefully, he pressed the tip to the girl's brow, the air thick with anticipation.

But the moment the stone touched her skin, the room seemed to tighten — the silence grew dense and heavy. No change, no ripple. Only the faint glimmer of the spirit stone, stubborn and unmoving.

In the stillness, the woman's breath hitched, her eyes shifting from confusion to disbelief. Her hands clenched into fists at her sides, as if grasping at some distant, unreachable truth.

....

The baby's gaze shifted. His tiny eyes, impossibly clear, shimmered with an ancient brightness—an unearthly depth that made the room's shadows seem trivial. Against the innocence of his fragile face, there was an undeniable presence, a quiet weight that pressed against the air itself.

He looked at his father—intently, steadily—as if weighing him in some silent judgment. That gaze held a spirituality that transcended the mere physics of flesh and bone.

In this diminutive form, an entire life's history flickered like distant stars—nearly thirty years' worth of experience concealed behind a face so young, so fragile, that it seemed almost a cruel trick of fate.

The chamber's stillness grew thicker, more oppressive with the silent acknowledgment that here, in this small body, swirled the remnants of ages—wisdom, pain, memories—locked in a quiet, unspoken language beyond words.

And the old man, observing it all, felt a shiver—an echo of something lost and yet somehow unbreakably present, as if the child's gaze contained the weight of destinies yet unfulfilled.

He had transmigrated. He was reborn—plunged anew into this fragile body, cradled within the walls of the Drake estate. In this small form, he was.

No way—so unlucky.

His thoughts flickered bitterly. He remembered his previous life—sharp-edged struggles, impossible odds, a relentless tide of misfortune that had seemed to swallow him whole. He had believed that luck—and perhaps even fate—had cursed him, casting him aside like discarded scrap.

And he had assumed, with a stubborn conviction, that this would persist in this new existence too. That nothing would change. That he would be doomed to the same battered script, endless echoes of failure rewriting themselves with each dawn.

Then, suddenly—

A voice, piercing through the silence, only for him.

"Ding ding ding! Booting up!"

It echoed softly in his mind, eerily clear, as if some unseen mechanism had come alive within his skull. The words felt absurd—alien—yet, at the same time, strangely familiar. As if this tiny body bore more than flesh; it carried a seed of something vast, something beyond comprehension.

He stared at the ceiling, wide-eyed, as the surge of consciousness shivered through him. In that moment, a strange feeling took root—an odd mixture of dread, curiosity, and an inexplicable flicker of hope. Maybe, just maybe, this new beginning was not as fixed as he thought.

And beneath it all, a silent promise blossomed: to see if luck could finally be rewritten.