You'd need to make an image with the chapter in it, or have the image and number separate.
You can make an ebook similar layout and fonts to a paper one, but there is lots you can't do at all. Headers, footers, text flowing around the shapes of an image and matching the size of text and images. Also multiple columns, math formula and tables are tricky.
That's why Indesign is a fudge for ebooks. Better to have the source in a Word or LO Writer file without headers, footers or stuff that doesn't work in an ebook. Use a small pages. Save an extra DocX with the fonts, styles, headings, TOC without page numbers.
Make an epub2 and proof it.
Edit a copy with features for paper book.
Then use Indesign to do a paper book if a PDF export of the Word/Writer document isn't fancy enough. Unless you are doing magazines, children's picture books, science texts or coffee table books there is no need for Indesign. LO Writer 4.x or later (it's at maybe 6.2) or Word 2002/XP or later is fine. Some versions of Word might need the PDF export plugin.
ALL Print ready for paper is via 1:1 PDF.
All modern ebooks can start as epub2. Amazon takes epub2 to make their three flavours of Kindle for reflowable ebooks.
It's not a real ebook if it can't reflow and doesn't work on 4" to 10" screens with the user making text smaller or bigger (the images don't usually resize).
Calibre or Sigil are better for real ebooks than Indesign.
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